Open Access BASE2020

Evaluating the causal impact of individual alcohol licensing decisions on local health and crime using natural experiments with synthetic controls

In: de Vocht , F , Mcquire , C , Brennan , A , Egan , M , Angus , C , Kaner , E , Beard , E , Brown , J , De Angelis , D , Carter , N , Murray , B , Dukes , R , Greenwood , E , Holden , S , Jago , R & Hickman , M 2020 , ' Evaluating the causal impact of individual alcohol licensing decisions on local health and crime using natural experiments with synthetic controls. ' , Addiction . https://doi.org/10.1111/add.15002

Abstract

Background and Aims: Given the costs of alcohol to society, it is important to evaluate whether local alcohol licensing decisions can mitigate the effects of alcohol misuse. Robust natural experiment evaluations of the impact of individual licensing decisions could potentially inform and improve local decision-making. We aimed to assess whether alcohol licensing decisions can be evaluated at small spatial scale in three English local areas (1,000 – 15,000 people) by using a causal inference framework. Design: This study described three natural experiments Setting: General population Measurements: Timeseries data were obtained on emergency department admissions, ambulance call-outs, and alcohol-related crime at the Lower or Middle Super Output geographical aggregation level. Intervention and comparator: The case study interventions were (i) the closure of a nightclub following reviews; (ii) closure of a restaurant/nightclub following reviews, and (iii) implementation of new local licensing guidance (LLG). Trends in outcomes were compared to synthetic counterfactuals created using Bayesian structural timeseries. Findings: Closure of the nightclub lead to temporary, 4-month, reductions in anti-social behaviour (-18%; 95% Credible Interval -37%, -4%), with no change on other outcomes. Closure of the restaurant/nightclub did not lead to measurable changes in outcomes. The new licensing guidance lead to small reductions in drunk and disorderly behaviour (9 of a predicted 21 events averted), and the unplanned end of the LLG coincided with an increase in domestic violence of 2 incidents per month. Conclusions: The impact of local alcohol policy, even at the level of individual premises, can be evaluated using this causal framework. Local government actions such as closure or restriction of venues and licensing may have a positive impact on health and crime in the immediate surrounding area.

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