Quantifying alcohol‐attributable disability‐adjusted life years to others than the drinker in Aotearoa/New Zealand: A modelling study based on administrative data

Author:

Casswell Sally1ORCID,Huckle Taisia1ORCID,Romeo Jose S.1ORCID,Moewaka Barnes Helen1,Connor Jennie2ORCID,Rehm Jürgen3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Social and Health Outcomes Research and Evaluation (SHORE), SHORE and Whariki Research Centre College of Health Massey University Auckland New Zealand

2. Department of Preventive and Social Medicine University of Otago Dunedin New Zealand

3. Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) Toronto ON Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackground and aimsQuantifying the health burden of alcohol has largely focused upon harm to drinkers, which is an underestimate. There is a growing literature on alcohol‘s harm to others (HTO), but it lacks the systematic transfer of HTO into a comparative risk assessment framework. This study calculated disability‐adjusted life years (DALYs) for fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD), interpersonal violence and traffic injury due to another‘s drinking.DesignThis study is a disease burden analysis, using modelling of DALYs for New Zealand in 2018.Setting and participantsThe study took place among the Aotearoa/New Zealand population in 2018.MeasurementsThe involvement of others’ drinking was obtained from prevalence, alcohol‐attributable fraction studies and administrative data. Disability weights (DW) for FASD were adapted from fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) weights using a Beta–Pert probability distribution; for interpersonal injury, DWs used hospital events linked with injury compensation; for traffic injury, DWs used hospital events. Populations were stratified by ethnicity, age group and gender. A descriptive comparison was made with a previous estimate of DALYs for drinkers.FindingsIn 2018, 78 277 healthy life years were lost in Aotearoa/New Zealand due to alcohol's HTO. The main contributor (90.3%) was FASD, then traffic crashes (6.3%) and interpersonal violence (3.4%). The indigenous population, Māori, was impacted at a higher rate (DALYs among Māori were 25 per 1000 population; among non‐Māori 15 per 1000 population). The burden of HTO was greater than that to drinkers (DALYs HTO = 78 277; DALYs drinkers = 60 174).ConclusionsDisability from fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) appears to be a major contributor to alcohol's harm to others in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Taking FASD into account, the health burden of harm to others is larger than harm to the drinker in Aotearoa/New Zealand, and ethnicity differences show inequity in harm to others. Quantification of the burden of harm informs the value of implementing effective alcohol policies and should include the full range of harms.

Funder

Health Research Council of New Zealand

Publisher

Wiley

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