Literature DB >> 11228078

Alcohol and mortality: methodological and analytical issues in aggregate analyses.

T Norström1, O J Skog.   

Abstract

This supplement includes a collection of papers that aim at estimating the relationship between per capita alcohol consumption and various forms of mortality, including mortality from liver cirrhosis, accidents, suicide, homicide, ischaemic heart disease, and total mortality. The papers apply a uniform methodological protocol, and they are all based on time series data covering the post-war period in the present EU countries and Norway. In this paper we discuss various methodological and analytical issues that are common to these papers. We argue that analysis of time series data is the most feasible approach for assessing the aggregate health consequences of changes in population drinking. We further discuss how aggregate data may also be useful for judging the plausibility of individual-level relationships, particularly those prone to be confounded by selection effects. The aggregation of linear and curvilinear risk curves is treated as well as various methods for dealing with the time-lag problem. With regard to estimation techniques we find country specific analyses preferable to pooled cross-sectional/time series models since the latter incorporate the dubious element of geographical co-variation, and conceal potentially interesting variations in alcohol effects. The approach taken in the papers at hand is instead to pool the country specific results into three groups of countries that represent different drinking cultures; traditional wine countries of southern Europe, beer countries of central Europe and the British Isles and spirits countries of northern Europe. The findings of the papers reinforce the central tenet of the public health perspective that overall consumption is an important determinant of alcohol-related harm rates. However, there is a variation across country groups in alcohol effects, particularly those on violent deaths, that indicates the potential importance of drinking patterns. There is no support for the notion that increases in per capita consumption have any cardioprotective effects at the population level.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11228078     DOI: 10.1080/09652140020021143

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Addiction        ISSN: 0965-2140            Impact factor:   6.526


  21 in total

1.  Alcohol and liver cirrhosis mortality in the United States: comparison of methods for the analyses of time-series panel data models.

Authors:  Yu Ye; William C Kerr
Journal:  Alcohol Clin Exp Res       Date:  2010-10-06       Impact factor: 3.455

2.  Heavy Drinking and Suicide in Russia.

Authors:  William Alex Pridemore
Journal:  Soc Forces       Date:  2006-09

3.  The effect of restricting opening hours on alcohol-related violence.

Authors:  Sergio Duailibi; William Ponicki; Joel Grube; Ilana Pinsky; Ronaldo Laranjeira; Martin Raw
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2007-10-30       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Minimum alcohol prices and outlet densities in British Columbia, Canada: estimated impacts on alcohol-attributable hospital admissions.

Authors:  Tim Stockwell; Jinhui Zhao; Gina Martin; Scott Macdonald; Kate Vallance; Andrew Treno; William Ponicki; Andrew Tu; Jane Buxton
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2013-04-18       Impact factor: 9.308

5.  Alcohol consumption and liver disease in Australia: a time series analysis of the period 1935-2006.

Authors:  Heng Jiang; Michael Livingston; Robin Room; Paul Dietze; Thor Norström; William C Kerr
Journal:  Alcohol Alcohol       Date:  2013-09-19       Impact factor: 2.826

6.  Per capita alcohol consumption and suicide mortality in a panel of US states from 1950 to 2002.

Authors:  William C Kerr; Meenakshi Subbaraman; Yu Ye
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Rev       Date:  2011-09

7.  Beverage-specific alcohol sale and cardiovascular mortality in Russia.

Authors:  Y E Razvodovsky
Journal:  J Environ Public Health       Date:  2011-01-23

8.  The Great Recession, unemployment and suicide.

Authors:  Thor Norström; Hans Grönqvist
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2014-10-22       Impact factor: 3.710

9.  Developing policy analytics for public health strategy and decisions-the Sheffield alcohol policy model framework.

Authors:  Alan Brennan; Petra Meier; Robin Purshouse; Rachid Rafia; Yang Meng; Daniel Hill-Macmanus
Journal:  Ann Oper Res       Date:  2013-10-08       Impact factor: 4.854

Review 10.  The use of epidemiology in alcohol research.

Authors:  Ingeborg Rossow; Thor Norström
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2012-11-07       Impact factor: 6.526

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