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Community Based Projects to Prevent Underage Drinking

Community Based Projects to Prevent Underage Drinking. Kathryn Stewart MADD National Board Safety and Policy Analysis International and Prevention Research Center Lafayette, California. Age 21 Laws have been effective!. Effects of Age 21 Laws. Reduction in alcohol consumption

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Community Based Projects to Prevent Underage Drinking

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  1. Community Based Projects to Prevent Underage Drinking Kathryn Stewart MADD National Board Safety and Policy Analysis International and Prevention Research Center Lafayette, California

  2. Age 21 Laws have been effective!

  3. Effects of Age 21 Laws Reduction in alcohol consumption Reduction in drinking driver fatal crashes Reduction in alcohol-related homicides, suicides, unintentional injuries

  4. Evidence of MLDA 21 Law Effectiveness Drinking Drivers Over Age 21 involved in fatal crashes: the decrease between 1982 and 2004 was -33% Drinking Drivers Under Age 21 involved in fatal crashes: the decrease between 1982 and 2004 -62% MLDA 21 accounted for much of the difference (Hedlund, et al., 2001)

  5. 1.3 FARS - sober drivers 1.2 1.1 1 0.9 0.8 0.7 Licensed drivers 0.6 0.5 FARS - alcohol positive 0.4 0.3 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Reduction in Impaired Driving since Drinking Age Raised in U.S.Drivers 20 and Younger

  6. Percent of 15-16 Year Olds Reporting Drinking in the Past 30 Days

  7. Percent of 15-16 Year Olds Reporting Intoxication in the Last 30 Days

  8. Lowering Drinking Age in New Zealand • New Zealand lowered drinking age from 20 to 18 in 1999 • Traffic crashes have increased as have other alcohol related injuries and problems among youth • Drinking and associated problems have trickled down to 15-17 year olds

  9. Underage Drinking: What Communities Can Do

  10. Examples of Coordinated Community Efforts • Preventing alcohol related problems at the US/Mexico Border • Controlling alcohol outlet density to prevent alcohol problems • Using policy and enforcement to prevent alcohol problems in college communities • Using community awareness and enforcement to reduce sales to minors

  11. The Border Project Preventing alcohol-related problems at the US/Mexico Border

  12. Sites • San Diego -Tijuana • El Paso – Juarez • Laredo –Nuevo Laredo • Brownsville - Matamoros

  13. The Problem • Mexico’s drinking age is 18 • Some border towns provided plentiful, cheap sources of alcohol

  14. The Problem • Mexico’s drinking age is 18 • Some border towns provided plentiful, cheap sources of alcohol • Young people traveled to Mexico to drink • Beverage service not always “responsible”

  15. The Problem • Mexico’s drinking age is 18 • Some border towns provided plentiful, cheap sources of alcohol • Young people traveled to Mexico to drink • Beverage service not always “responsible” • Heavy drinking occurred • Sometimes resulted in problems, including impaired driving on the way home

  16. The Implementation Strategy • The nature and scope of the problem were explained to groups and agencies on both sides of the border • Media advocacy brought the problem to the attention of the public through compelling news coverage

  17. The Change Strategies • Earlier bar closings • Stepped up DUI enforcement efforts on the US side of the border • Highly publicized enforcement of laws against crossing by youth under 18 • New restrictions on Marines from Camp Pendleton

  18. The Results • Dramatic decline in number of nighttime crossings by young people • Reduction in nighttime crashes involving drivers under 18 • 90% reduction in number of Marines driving back from the border

  19. Alcohol Outlet Density and Alcohol Problems Controlling Alcohol Problems through Controlling the Alcohol Environment

  20. The Problem Neighborhoods where bars, restaurants and liquor and other stores that sell alcohol are close together suffer more frequent incidences alcohol-related problems.

  21. Problems include • Underage drinking • Impaired driving • Property crime • Violent crime • Child abuse and neglect

  22. The Implementation Strategy • Make communities aware of the problems created by alcohol outlets • Make communities aware of the policy strategies that can control outlet location and density • Licensing policies • Land use policies

  23. The ResultsCommunities can: • Set minimum distances between alcohol outlets • Limit new licenses for areas that already have outlets too close together; • Not issue a new license when an outlet goes out of business • Permanently close outlets that repeatedly violate liquor laws

  24. The Follow-up • Policy changes can permanently change the environment • Reductions in alcohol problems can be sustained • Communities are empowered to take control of the alcohol environment

  25. Safer California UniversitiesProject Goal To evaluate the efficacy of a“Risk Management” approach to alcohol problem prevention NIAAA grant #R01 AA12516with support from CSAP/SAMHSA.

  26. Why Care About College Student Drinking? • Over 1,700 deaths among 18-24 year old college students • 590,000 unintentionally injured under the influence of alcohol • More than 690,000 assaulted by another student who has been drinking • More than 97,000 are victims of alcohol-related sexual assault or date rape • About 25 percent of college students report academic consequences of their drinking

  27. What are we trying to prevent? • Intoxication • Harm related to intoxication

  28. Integrated Intervention Strategies for Off-Campus Parties • A Social Host Safe Party Campaign • Compliance Checks • DUI Check Points • Party Patrols • Pass Social Host “Response Cost” Ordinance

  29. Outcomes • Likelihood of getting drunk at bars or restaurants much less. • Likelihood of getting drunk at off campus parties much less. • Overall likelihood of getting drunk at any location much less.

  30. In addition…No Displacement

  31. Reducing Youth Access to Alcohol: Integrated Environmental Approaches Reward and Reminder Program Minor Decoy Operations Shoulder Tap Operations Party Patrols Traffic Surveillance Media Advocacy

  32. Reward & Reminder

  33. Community Outcomes • Reduce sales of alcohol to minors • Reduce impaired driving and other alcohol-related problems • Involve the whole community in changing the environment • Change community attitudes and culture

  34. Conclusions Communities can create environments that reduce alcohol related problems through: • Understanding the nature of the problems • Development of appropriate policies • Strategic use of law enforcement resources • Strategic use of community awareness

  35. www.resources.prev.org

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