November 26, 2019

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Alcohol and tobacco policies can reduce cancer deaths: study

Smoking. Credit: Pixabay
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Smoking. Credit: Pixabay

Policies aimed at cutting alcohol and tobacco consumption, including the introduction of random breath testing programs and bans on cigarette advertising, have resulted in a significant reduction in Australian cancer death rates, new research shows.

The La Trobe Centre for Alcohol Policy Research (CAPR) has led the first study into how public health policies on and implemented from the 1960s affected cancer deaths in Australia.

Researchers led by La Trobe epidemiologist Dr. Jason (Heng) Jiang, compared cancer mortality data available from the 1950s with historical alcohol and tobacco control policies and 100-years of consumption data.

Dr. Jiang said the results are a century in the making.

"Our research provides new evidence that key on alcohol and tobacco introduced in Australia from the 1960s to 2013 are related to reductions in for various cancers," Dr. Jiang said.

"The changes in mortality rates are measured over 20-year periods and emphasise that the effects of alcohol and tobacco policies cannot be fully evaluated in the short-term.

"It's clear from our findings that the full effect of more recent policies, such as plain cigarette packaging and alcohol content labelling of beverages, may not be known for decades."

Published today in BMC Medicine , the researchers found:

Dr. Jiang said the study should help inform future government campaigns or policies on alcohol and tobacco.

"It's important to evaluate what works, what doesn't, and where to invest future funding," Dr. Jiang said.

"We hope these findings will also help Australians make more informed decisions on their alcohol and tobacco consumption," Dr. Jiang said.

Background

The researchers used annual population-based time series data from 1911 to 2013 which reported per capita alcohol and . They also accessed mortality data from the 1950s to 2013 for cancers of the head and neck (lip, , pharynx, larynx and oesophagus), lung, breast, colorectum, anus and liver collected by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, Cancer Council Victoria, the WHO Cancer Mortality Database and the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.

More information: BMC Medicine (2019). DOI: 10.1186/s12916-019-1453-z

Journal information: BMC Medicine

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