Journal article
P-30 IMPACT OF PUBLIC HEALTH POLICIES ON ALCOHOL-ASSOCIATED LIVER DISEASE IN LATIN AMERICA: AN ECOLOGICAL MULTI-NATIONAL STUDY
Annals of hepatology, v 24, p100394
Sep 2021
Abstract
Alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) is the leading cause of liver-related mortality in Latin-America, yet the impact of public health policies (PHP) on alcohol consumption and liver disease is unknown.
To assess the association between alcohol PHP, alcohol consumption, and cirrhosis in Latin-American countries.
We performed an ecological multi-national study including 20 countries in Latin-America (628,466,088 inhabitants). We obtained country-level socio-demographic information from the World Bank Open Data source. Alcohol-related PHP data for countries in Latin-America were obtained from the World Health Organization (WHO) Global Information System of Alcohol and Health (GISAH). We used a fixed-effects model to estimate proportions and multiple linear regression models to examine the association between the number of PHP and outcomes (alcohol intake, and deaths due to cirrhosis & traffic injuries).
The prevalence of obesity was 27% and 26.1% among males and females, respectively. The estimated alcohol per capita consumption (APC) among the population 15 years old was 6.8 liters of pure alcohol (5.6 recorded and 1.2 unrecorded). The countries with the highest APC were Uruguay (10.8 liters), Argentina (9.8 liters), and Chile (9.3 liters). The overall prevalence of alcohol use disorders (AUD) was 4.9%. ALD was the main cause of cirrhosis in 64.7% of males and 40.0% of females. A total of 19 (95%) countries have at least one alcohol-related PHP on alcohol. The most frequent PHP were: limiting drinking age (95%), tax control (90%), alcohol and driving (90%), and government monitoring systems (90%)(Table). A higher number of alcohol-related PHP was associated with a lower odds of AUD (OR 0.83, 95%CI:0.73-0.94; p=0.004), lower mortality due to ALD (OR 0.18, 95%CI:0.07-0.46, p<0.001), and lower mortality due to alcohol-attributable road traffic injuries (OR 0.84, 95%CI:0.71-0.98; p=0.028).
Our study demonstrates that countries with more alcohol-related PHP have lower alcohol per capita consumption, alcohol-associated cirrhosis, and deadly alcohol-attributable road traffic injuries. These results highlight the value of alcohol control policies in all countries to reduce the burden of excessive alcohol consumption.
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Details
- Title
- P-30 IMPACT OF PUBLIC HEALTH POLICIES ON ALCOHOL-ASSOCIATED LIVER DISEASE IN LATIN AMERICA: AN ECOLOGICAL MULTI-NATIONAL STUDY
- Creators
- Antonio Díaz Luis - Pontificia Universidad Católica de ChileFrancisco Idalsoaga - Pontificia Universidad Católica de ChileEduardo Fuentes-López - Pontificia Universidad Católica de ChileAndrea Márquez - Anahuac Mayab UniversityCarolina A. Ramírez - Clínica Las CondesJuan Pablo Roblero - Hospital Clínico de la Universidad de ChileAraujo Roberta C. - University of Sao PauloFátima Higuera – de – la – tijera - Hospital General de MéxicoLuis Guillermo Toro - Hepatology and Liver Transplant Unit, Hospitales de San Vicente Fundación de Medellín y Rionegro, ColombiaGalo Pazmiño - Pontificia Universidad Católica del EcuadorPedro Montes - Department of Gastroenterology, Hospital Nacional Daniel A. Carrión. Callao, PerúNelia Hernandez - Universidad de la República de UruguayManuel Mendizabal - Hospital Universitario AustralOscar Corsi - Pontificia Universidad Católica de ChileCatterina Ferreccio - Advanced Center for Chronic DiseasesMariana Lazo - Drexel UniversityMayur Brahmania - London Health Sciences CentreAshwani K. Singal - University of South DakotaRamon Bataller - University of Pittsburgh Medical CenterMarco Arrese - Pontificia Universidad Católica de ChileJuan Pablo Arab - Hospital Clínico de la Universidad de Chile
- Publication Details
- Annals of hepatology, v 24, p100394
- Publisher
- Elsevier España, S.L.U
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Urban Health Collaborative
- Other Identifier
- 991020550498204721