| Literature DB >> 32414068 |
Clare Beeston1, Mark Robinson2, Lucie Giles1, Elinor Dickie1, Jane Ford1, Megan MacPherson3, Rachel McAdams1, Ruth Mellor4, Deborah Shipton1, Neil Craig1.
Abstract
In May 2018, Scotland became the first country in the world to implement minimum unit pricing (MUP) for all alcoholic drinks sold in licensed premises in Scotland. The use of a Sunset Clause in the MUP legislation was a factor in successfully resisting legal challenges by indicating that the final decision on a novel policy would depend on its impact. An overarching evaluation has been designed and the results will provide important evidence to inform the parliamentary vote on the future of MUP in Scotland. The evaluation uses a mixed methods portfolio of in-house, commissioned, and separately funded studies to assess the impact of MUP across multiple intended and unintended outcomes related to compliance, the alcoholic drinks industry, consumption, and health and social harms. Quantitative studies to measure impact use a suitable control where feasible. Qualitative studies assess impact and provide an understanding of the lived experience and mechanism of change for key sub-groups. As well as providing important evidence to inform the parliamentary vote, adding to the international evidence on impact and experience of alcohol pricing policy across a broad range of outcomes, this approach to evaluating novel policy interventions may provide guidance for future policy innovations.Entities:
Keywords: Scotland; alcohol; evaluation; minimum unit pricing; natural experiment; price
Year: 2020 PMID: 32414068 PMCID: PMC7277813 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17103394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Theory of Change for minimum unit pricing for alcohol.
List of Monitoring and Evaluating Scotland’s Alcohol Strategy (MESAS) and separately funded studies, and outcome areas.
| Compliance, Implementation + Attitudes | Alcohol Industry | Consumption | Health and Social Harms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MESAS Funded Studies | ||||
| Compliance |
| |||
| Economic impact |
| |||
| Small retailers | √ |
| ||
| Price distribution | √ |
| ||
| Products and prices |
| |||
| Sales-based consumption | √ |
| ||
| Harmful drinking | √ |
| √ | |
| Children and young people: Own drinking | √ |
| √ | |
| Health harms |
| |||
| Crime, public safety and public nuisance |
| |||
| Children + young people: Harm from others |
| |||
| Public Attitudes |
| |||
| Separately-funded studies | ||||
| Consumption and health service impacts of MUP | √ |
|
| |
| Self-reported consumption |
| √ | ||
| Daily survey | √ |
| √ | |
| Homeless drinkers | √ |
| √ | |
| Ambulance call-outs | √ | |||
| Prescribing | √ | |||
| Household expenditure | √ | |||
Brief description of MESAS-funded studies, data period, research team and funder.
| Study | Research Team | Brief Description | Data Period | Study Funder |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Compliance | NHS Health Scotland | Qualitative study. | Aug.–Oct. 2018 | Scottish Government |
| Economic impact on the alcoholic drinks industry in Scotland | Frontier Economics | Mixed methods study. | Industry survey data 2011–2019/20 | Scottish Government |
| Small retailers | University of Stirling; University of Sheffield | Mixed methods study with 3 work packages | Price data and documentary analysis: Aug. 2017–Jan. 2019 | Scottish Government |
| Alcohol price distribution | Public Health Scotland | Quantitative study. | April 2015–May 2019 | Scottish Government |
| Alcohol products and prices | Public Health Scotland | Quantitative study. | Retailer data: April 2015–May 2019 | Scottish Government |
| Sales-based consumption | Public Health Scotland | Quantitative study. | Jan. 2013–April 2021 | Scottish Government |
| Drinking at harmful levels | University of Sheffield, University of Newcastle (Australia) and Figure 8 Consultancy | Mixed methods study with four work packages | Data collection in services: Wave 1: Nov. 2017–April 2018 | Scottish Government |
| Children and young people: own drinking and related behaviour. | Iconic Consulting | Qualitative study | Nov. 2018–Mar. 2019 | Scottish Government |
| Hospital admissions and deaths | Public Health Scotland | Quantitative study | Jan. 2012–April 2021 | Scottish Government |
| Crime, public safety, and public nuisance | Manchester Metropolitan University | Mixed methods study: | 2013–2019 | Scottish Government |
| Children and young people: Harm from others. | Public Health Scotland | Qualitative study. | Jan.–Mar. 2019 | Scottish Government |
| Public attitudes to MUP | Data collected by ScotCen, analysed by Public Health Scotland | Quantitative study: | 2013, 2015, and 2019 | Scottish Government |
|
| ||||
| Consumption and health service impacts of MUP | University of Glasgow, University of Stirling plus others | Mixed methods study with three work packages: | Emergency department and sexual health clinics: Feb. 2018, Oct. 2018, and Feb. 2019 | National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) |
| Self-reported consumption | University of Glasgow | Quantitative study. | 1995–2020 | Medial Research Council/Chief Scientist Office |
| Daily survey (N of 1) | University of Glasgow | Mixed methods study. | Feb. 2018–Sept. 2019 | Alcohol Change UK |
| Homeless drinkers | Glasgow Caledonian University | Qualitative study. | June 2019–Jan. 2021 | Chief Scientist Office (CSO) |
| Ambulance call-outs | University of Stirling; University of Glasgow; University of Sheffield | Mixed methods study. | May 2015–Oct. 2020 | Chief Scientist Office (CSO) |
| Prescribing | University of Glasgow | Quantitative study. | May 2018–May 2019 | Alcohol Change UK |
| Household expenditure | University of Aberdeen | Quantitative study | April 2020–2022 | Chief Scientist Office (CSO) |