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Journal Article

Citation

Pridemore WA, Chamlin MB, Kaylen MT, Andreev E. Addiction 2013; 108(12): 2112-2118.

Affiliation

Georgia State University, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Atlanta, Georgia 30302. william.pridemore@gmail.com.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/add.12311

PMID

23889922

Abstract

AIMS: To determine the impact of a suite of 2006 Russian alcohol control policies on deaths due to traffic accidents in the country. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS: We used autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) interrupted time series techniques to model the impact of the intervention on the outcome series. The time series began in January 2000 and ended in December 2010. The alcohol policy was implemented in January 2006, providing 132 monthly observations in the outcome series, with 72 months of pre-intervention data and 60 months of post-intervention data. MEASUREMENTS: The outcome variables were the monthly number of male- and female-specific deaths of those aged 15+ years due to transport accidents in Russia. FINDINGS: The 2006 set of alcohol policies had no impact on female deaths due to traffic accidents (ω0 = 50.31, p = .27). However, the intervention model revealed an immediate and sustained monthly decrease of 203 deaths due to transport accidents for males (ω0 = 203.40, p = .04), representing an 11% reduction relative to pre-intervention levels CONCLUSION: The implementation of the suite of 2006 Russian alcohol control policies is partially responsible for saving more than 2400 male lives annually that would otherwise have been lost to traffic accidents.


Language: en

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