The introduction of a minimum unit price for alcohol will have
the greatest impact on hazardous and harmful drinkers, new
research commissioned by the Welsh Government shows.
In October, the Welsh Government unveiled a new Bill that will,
if passed by the National Assembly for Wales, introduce a minimum
price for the sale of alcohol. The Bill is designed to tackle the
health impacts of excessive alcohol consumption.
The Sheffield Alcohol Research Group at the University of
Sheffield were commissioned by the Welsh Government in June 2017
to update the 2014 model-based
appraisal of the likely impact of a range of minimum unit pricing
policies in Wales.
The research published today is an interim report which updates
the modelling undertaken by the University of Sheffield in 2014,
and provides an analysis of the health impacts of a 50 pence
minimum unit price, as an illustrative example, for comparison
with that used in the 2014 report.
The research shows that harmful drinkers purchase almost half
(46%) of their alcohol for less than 50p per unit. They account
for 4% of the drinker population, they drink 27% of, and are
responsible for 20% of all spending on, all alcohol consumed in
Wales.
In contrast, moderate drinkers purchase less than a quarter (22%)
of their alcohol for less than 50p per unit which means it is
estimated moderate drinkers would only spend £8.30 extra per year
under a 50p MUP.
The research also shows:
- A 50p MUP is estimated to avoid 66 deaths and 1,281 hospital
admissions per year.
- Harmful drinkers in the most deprived areas make up 0.6% of
the drinker population, the modelling estimates that they will
experience 45% of the averted alcohol-attributable deaths and 24%
of the averted alcohol-attributable hospital admissions.
- Almost three quarters of drinkers drink within the UK Chief
Medical Officer’s guidelines of 14 units/week, however 24% of
drinkers are drinking at potentially hazardous levels (14-50
units/week for men and 14-35 for women), and over 4% are harmful
drinkers (over 50 units/week for men and 35 for women).
- Very little alcohol is sold in the on-trade (pubs and
restaurants) at below the example 50p MUP threshold (less than 1%
of all sales), but a significant proportion of off-trade
(off-licences) alcohol is (46%), and overall 37% of all units
drunk are bought for less than 50p.
Health Secretary, said:
“This research is further evidence that there is a very clear and
direct link between levels of excessive drinking and the
availability of cheap alcohol.
“The introduction of a minimum unit price will have a clear
impact on those who drink harmful and hazardous levels of cheap,
strong alcohol. It is also expected to make an important
contribution to addressing health inequalities by improving the
health outcomes of hazardous and harmful drinkers living in the
most deprived areas of Wales.
“All alcohol-attributable deaths are avoidable deaths – so by
introducing this measure, we will save lives.”