The potential adverse effects of minors' exposure to alcohol‐related stimuli via licenced venues: A narrative review

Author:

Booth Leon1ORCID,Miller Mia2ORCID,Pettigrew Simone1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The George Institute for Global Health, UNSW Sydney Sydney Australia

2. Menzies School of Health Research Charles Darwin University Darwin Australia

Abstract

AbstractIssuesYoung people are particularly impressionable when it comes to forming expectations and attitudes around alcohol consumption. Any stimuli that normalise and foster positive expectations around alcohol use may increase the risk of underage alcohol consumption. Alcohol venues that market themselves as being appropriate ‘family friendly’ establishments for children risk exposing minors to environments that are saturated with alcohol‐related stimuli. However, research examining how exposure to licenced venues affects underage people is very limited. The aim of this narrative review was to identify and synthesise relevant evidence to better understand how attending these venues might affect minors.ApproachA narrative review of research published between January 2016 and November 2022 was conducted to investigate the potential effects on underage people of exposure to licenced venues and stimuli encountered in/around these venues. Examined stimuli included alcohol advertising, people consuming alcohol and alcohol outlets.Key FindingsThe reviewed literature indicates that the risk of alcohol‐related harm among minors is likely to increase with greater exposure to alcohol venues due to the associated exposure to alcohol advertising, exposure to others consuming alcohol and higher outlet density. In combination, these factors are likely to normalise alcohol consumption for minors and create positive alcohol expectancies.Implications and ConclusionVenues serving alcohol should be discouraged from targeting families and parents should be warned about the risks associated with taking minors to venues where alcohol is sold and consumed.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health (social science),Medicine (miscellaneous)

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