Outlet density and cumulative impact Dr James Nicholls Alcohol Research UK Three issues Public health licensing objective for cumulative impact areas Research on outlet density consumption and harm ID: 356520
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Public health and licensing workshopOutlet density and cumulative impact
Dr James NichollsAlcohol Research UKSlide2
Three issues
Public health licensing objective for cumulative impact areasResearch on outlet density, consumption and harmScotland and ‘overprovision’ policiesSlide3
Cumulative impact policiesA ‘rebuttable presumption that applications [which add to cumulative impact] will normally be refused’ (Sections 13.19-38 of Section 182 Guidance)
Consensus that outlet density exacerbates particular harms158 CIAs across 93 licensing authorities in 2012 [134 / 83 in 2010]Health evidence valid in preparing a policy (s. 13.23), but no health objective for it to address.Slide4Slide5
‘We want to ensure that licensing authorities are able to take alcohol-related health harms into consideration when making decisions about cumulative impact policies (CIPs) which can be used to manage problems linked to the density of premises in specific areas.
We consider that a new health-related objective for alcohol licensing related specifically to cumulative impact is the best way to achieve this.’Slide6Slide7Slide8
Objections to health objective
A&E admissions already covered by crime and disorder objectiveNo link between density and health at local levelA ‘bridge to far’ for health involvement in licensingSlide9
Outlet density: evidence reviewsPopova
, S. et al. (2009) ‘Hours and days of sale and density of alcohol outlets: Impacts on alcohol consumption and damage: a systematic review’, Alcohol and Alcoholism 44.5 (500-16)Jackson et al. (2009) ‘Interventions on control of alcohol price, promotion and availability for prevention of alcohol use disorders in adults and young people’, NICE evidence reviewHome Office (2012)
‘Impact assessment: consultation on including a health objective in the Licensing Act 2003 related specifically to cumulative impact’Slide10
Outlet density and consumption
Jackson et al. (2009): ‘A clear positive association between outlet density and increases in alcohol consumption was observed among both adults and young people. Further limited evidence was also identified that found a positive relationship between alcohol outlet density and alcohol-related harms.’Consistent evidence of impact on crime and
disorder (though variations by locality and type of outlet)Slide11
Outlet density and health
Theall, K. et al. (2009) ‘The neighborhood alcohol environment and alcohol-related morbidity’, Alcohol and Alcoholism 44.5 (491-9)Livingston, M. (2011) ‘Alcohol outlet density and harm: comparing the impacts on violence and chronic harms’,
Drug and Alcohol Review 30 (515-23)Also evidence from Nordic studies following state-level changes in legislation.Slide12
Outlet density and health: the evidence
Theall et al., 2009: ‘Our findings support the notion that alcohol outlets are likely to play a significant role in health outcomes at neighborhood level, irrespective of individual consumption patterns’Livingston (2011): 10% increase in the number of off-licenses would increase hospital admissions by 1.9% (on-licenses = 0.5%)
‘There was a strong positive association between [off-license] density and rates of alcohol-caused chronic disease.’Slide13
‘Outlet density’ today
1884
2012Slide14
Key problemsRebalancing towards the off-trade
Capacity v number of outletsImpact of supermarkets on small off-licenses (cf. Forsyth, A. (2012) ‘Shop servers experience of alcohol-related issues and interventions in socially contrasting neighbourhoods’ Alcohol Research UK)Effective proximity measures (especially supermarkets and online)
Scale of CIA for health indicatorsSlide15
Scale of cumulative impact areasLicensing authorities could introduce a new CIP or ‘extend the geographic area of an existing CIP (potentially to cover the whole licensing authority area) following consideration of health data’ (
Health Objective Impact Assessment, p. 5)Croydon’s proposed borough-wide policy is ‘disproportionate and unhelpful … [It] may well be open to challenge and it certainly falls foul of national policy’ (Association of Licensed Multiple Retailers Press Release 25th Feb
)Is Government guidance clear enough on this?Slide16
Licensing (Scotland) Act 2005Fifth licensing objective:
‘Protecting and improving public health’OverprovisionRequirement for statement on ‘overprovision’ in Statement of Licensing PolicySlide17
Support for data-gathering
Focus on Statements of Licensing PolicyProblem of causal relationships – bar is lower for overprovision (risk, rather than undermining objectives)Strong trade resistance – legal challenges
Alcohol and Drug PartnershipsCommunity engagement through Licensing ForumsSlide18