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Alcohol advertising and public health: systems perspectives versus narrow perspectives
  1. M Petticrew1,
  2. I Shemilt2,
  3. T Lorenc3,
  4. T M Marteau4,
  5. G J Melendez-Torres5,
  6. A O'Mara-Eves2,
  7. K Stautz4,
  8. J Thomas2
  1. 1Faculty of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
  2. 2EPPI-Centre, SSRU, Department of Social Science, UCL Institute of Education, University College London, London, UK
  3. 3Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, University of York, York, UK
  4. 4Behaviour and Health Research Unit, Institute of Public Health, Cambridge, UK
  5. 5Division of Health Sciences, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
  1. Correspondence to Dr M Petticrew, Faculty of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London WC1H 9SH, UK; mark.petticrew{at}lshtm.ac.uk

Abstract

Background Alcohol consumption is influenced by a complex causal system of interconnected psychological, behavioural, social, economic, legal and environmental factors. These factors are shaped by governments (eg, licensing laws and taxation), by consumers (eg, patterns of alcohol consumption drive demand) and by alcohol industry practices, such as advertising. The marketing and advertising of alcoholic products contributes to an ‘alcogenic environment’ and is a modifiable influence on alcohol consumption and harm. The public health perspective is that there is sufficient evidence that alcohol advertising influences consumption. The alcohol industry disputes this, asserting that advertising only aims to help consumers choose between brands.

Methods We review the evidence from recent systematic reviews, including their theoretical and methodological assumptions, to help understand what conclusions can be drawn about the relationships between alcohol advertising, advertising restrictions and alcohol consumption.

Conclusions A wide evidence base needs to be drawn on to provide a system-level overview of the relationship between alcohol advertising, advertising restrictions and consumption. Advertising aims to influence not just consumption, but also to influence awareness, attitudes and social norms; this is because advertising is a system-level intervention with multiple objectives. Given this, assessments of the effects of advertising restrictions which focus only on sales or consumption are insufficient and may be misleading. For this reason, previous systematic reviews, such as the 2014 Cochrane review on advertising restrictions (Siegfried et al) contribute important, but incomplete representations of ‘the evidence’ needed to inform the public health case for policy decisions on alcohol advertising. We conclude that an unintended consequence of narrow, linear framings of complex system-level issues is that they can produce misleading answers. Systems problems require systems perspectives.

  • ALCOHOL
  • PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY
  • SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS

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Footnotes

  • Contributors MP wrote the first draft and is the guarantor. MP and IS revised the next draft, incorporating revisions from other authors, and TL, TMM, GJM-T, AO-E, KS and JT revised and contributed to writing subsequent drafts and the final version.

  • Funding Medical Research Council (MRC) Methods Research Programme.

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.