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Dealing with alcohol-related problems in the night-time economy: a study protocol for mapping trends in harm and stakeholder views surrounding local community level interventions

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posted on 2025-05-10, 11:51 authored by Peter Miller, Daren Palmer, Christophe Lecathelinais, John WiggersJohn Wiggers, Nicolas Droste, Jenny Tindall, Karen Gillham, Anders Sonderland, Emma McFarlane, Florentine de Groot, Amy Sawyer, Daniel Groombridge
Background: This project will provide a comprehensive investigation into the prevalence of alcohol-related harms and community attitudes in the context of community-based interventions being implemented to reduce harm in two regional centres of Australia. While considerable experimentation and innovation to address these harms has occurred in both Geelong and Newcastle, only limited ad-hoc documentation and analysis has been conducted on changes in the prevalence of harm as a consequence, leaving a considerable gap in terms of a systematic, evidence-based analysis of changes in harm over time and the need for further intervention. Similarly, little evidence has been reported regarding the views of key stakeholder groups, industry, government agencies, patrons or community regarding the need for, and the acceptability of, interventions to reduce harms. This project will aim to provide evidence regarding the impact and acceptability of local initiatives aimed at reducing alcohol-related harms. Methods/Design: This study will gather existing police data (assault, property damage and drink driving offences), Emergency Department presentations and Ambulance attendance data. Further, the research team will conduct interviews with licensed venue patrons and collect observational data of licensed venues. Key informant interviews will assess expert knowledge from key industry and government stakeholders, and a community survey will assess community experiences and attitudes towards alcohol-related harm and harm-reduction strategies. Overall, the project will assess: the extent of alcohol-related harm in the context of harm-reduction interventions, and the need for and acceptability of further intervention. Discussion: These findings will be used to improve evidence-based practice both nationally and internationally. Ethical Approval: This project has been approved by Deakin University HREC.

History

Journal title

BMC Research Notes

Volume

4

Issue

204

Publisher

BioMed Central

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Health

School

School of Medicine and Public Health

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