XIV. Azzone e il diritto canonico: La collezione Azo A: 13 e 17
In: Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte. Kanonistische Abteilung, Band 83, Heft 1, S. 249-271
ISSN: 2304-4896
5 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte. Kanonistische Abteilung, Band 83, Heft 1, S. 249-271
ISSN: 2304-4896
In: Alberto Alemanno and Amandine Garde, Regulating Lifestyle – Europe, Alcohol, Tobacco and Unhealthy Diets, Cambridge University Press, 2014.
SSRN
Governments can use fiscal policies or regulation to influence the prices of products with potential health impacts, aiming to change their consumption. In particular, policies aimed at raising prices, such as taxation, have caused concerns because they may impose an unfair financial burden on low-income households. We estimated patterns of expenditure on potentially unhealthy products by socioeconomic status, based on household expenditure surveys, with a primary focus on low- and middle-income countries, and we found that price policies affect the consumption and expenditure of a larger number of high-income than low-income households, and any resulting price increases are financed disproportionately by high-income households. As a share of all household consumption, however, price increases are often a larger burden for low-income households, depending on how much consumption is changed, most consistently in the case of tobacco. Larger health benefits will likely accrue to individual low-income consumers, due to their stronger response to price changes, but depending on initial consumption and associated health risks. In the case of taxing unhealthy products, a potentially larger financial burden on low-income households can be mitigated by a pro-poor use of the tax revenues generated.
BASE
BACKGROUND: Air pollution damages health by promoting the onset of some non-communicable diseases (NCDs), putting additional strain on the National Health Service (NHS) and social care. This study quantifies the total health and related NHS and social care cost burden due to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) in England. METHOD AND FINDINGS: Air pollutant concentration surfaces from land use regression models and cost data from hospital admissions data and a literature review were fed into a microsimulation model, that was run from 2015 to 2035. Different scenarios were modelled: (1) baseline 'no change' scenario; (2) individuals' pollutant exposure is reduced to natural (non-anthropogenic) levels to compute the disease cases attributable to PM2.5 and NO2; (3) PM2.5 and NO2 concentrations reduced by 1 μg/m3; and (4) NO2 annual European Union limit values reached (40 μg/m3). For the 18 years after baseline, the total cumulative cost to the NHS and social care is estimated at £5.37 billion for PM2.5 and NO2 combined, rising to £18.57 billion when costs for diseases for which there is less robust evidence are included. These costs are due to the cumulative incidence of air-pollution-related NCDs, such as 348,878 coronary heart disease cases estimated to be attributable to PM2.5 and 573,363 diabetes cases estimated to be attributable to NO2 by 2035. Findings from modelling studies are limited by the conceptual model, assumptions, and the availability and quality of input data. CONCLUSIONS: Approximately 2.5 million cases of NCDs attributable to air pollution are predicted by 2035 if PM2.5 and NO2 stay at current levels, making air pollution an important public health priority. In future work, the modelling framework should be updated to include multi-pollutant exposure-response functions, as well as to disaggregate results by socioeconomic status.
BASE
In: Burton , R , Henn , C , Lavoie , D , O'Connor , R , Perkins , C , Sweeney , K , Greaves , F , Ferguson , B , Beynon , C , Belloni , A , Musto , V , Marsden , J & Sheron , N 2017 , ' A rapid evidence review of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of alcohol control policies: an English perspective ' , Lancet , vol. 389 , no. 10078 , pp. 1558-1580 . https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(16)32420-5
Summary This paper reviews the evidence for the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of policies to reduce alcohol-related harm. Policies focus on price, marketing, availability, information and education, the drinking environment, drink-driving, and brief interventions and treatment. Although there is variability in research design and measured outcomes, evidence supports the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of policies that address affordability and marketing. An adequate reduction in temporal availability, particularly late night on-sale availability, is effective and cost-effective. Individually-directed interventions delivered to at-risk drinkers and enforced legislative measures are also effective. Providing information and education increases awareness, but is not sufficient to produce long-lasting changes in behaviour. At best, interventions enacted in and around the drinking environment lead to small reductions in acute alcohol-related harm. Overall, there is a rich evidence base to support the decisions of policy makers in implementing the most effective and cost-effective policies to reduce alcohol-related harm.
BASE