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Journal Article

Citation

Wagenaar AC, Livingston MD, Pettigrew DW, Kominsky TK, Komro KA. Addiction 2018; 113(4): 647-655.

Affiliation

Department of Behavioral Sciences and Health Education, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, 1518 Clifton Rd NE, Atlanta, GA, 30322, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/add.14113

PMID

29178239

Abstract

AIMS: We evaluated the effects of a community organizing intervention, Communities Mobilizing for Change on Alcohol (CMCA), on the propensity of retail alcohol outlets to sell alcohol to young buyers without age identification and on alcohol acquisition behaviors of underage youth.

DESIGN: Random assignment of community to treatment (n=3) or control (n=2). Student surveys were conducted four times per year for three years; the cohort was in 9th and 10th grades in the 2012-13 academic year. Alcohol purchase attempts were conducted every 4 weeks at alcohol retailers in each community (31 repeated waves). SETTING: The Cherokee Nation, located in northeastern Oklahoma, USA. PARTICIPANTS: 1399 high school students (50% male; 45% American Indian) and 113 stores licensed to sell alcohol across 5 study communities. INTERVENTION: Local community organizers formed independent citizen Action Teams to advance policies, procedures and practices of local institutions in ways to reduce youth access to alcohol and foster community norms opposed to teen drinking. MEASUREMENTS: Perceptions regarding police enforcement and perceived difficulty of and self-reported actual acquisition of alcohol from parents, adults, peers, and stores.

FINDINGS: Alcohol purchases by young-appearing buyers declined significantly, an 18 (95% CI: 3, 33) percentage-point reduction over the intervention period. Student survey results show statistically significant differences in the trajectory of perceived police enforcement, increasing 7 (4, 10) percentage-points, alcohol acquisition from parents, decreasing 4, (0.1, 8) percentage-points, acquisition from 21+ adults, decreasing 6 (0.04, 11) percentage points, from <21 peers decreasing 8 (3, 13) percentage-points, and acquisition from stores decreasing 5 (1, 9) percentage-points.

CONCLUSIONS: A community organizing intervention, Communities Mobilizing for Change on Alcohol (CMCA), is effective in reducing the availability of alcohol to underage youth in the USA. Furthermore, results indicate that the previously reported significant effects of CMCA on teen drinking operate, at least in part, through effects on alcohol access.

This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Cherokee Nation; Native American; RCT; alcohol access; cluster randomized trial; community organizing; intensive longitudinal; youth drinking prevention

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