Beer consumption and premature mortality in Louisiana: an ecologic analysis.

OBJECTIVE This study was conducted to determine whether beer consumption is associated with premature mortality across municipalities in Louisiana. METHOD We conducted a cross-sectional ecologic study using tax data on the sales of beer and mortality data from Louisiana. We aggregated deaths that occurred before the age of 65 to the level of the municipality and calculated age-adjusted rates of both overall premature mortality and specific causes of premature mortality that may be related to alcohol. After controlling for potential confounders including population distributions for race, income, employment and education, we examined whether beer sales were independently associated with premature mortality rates due to homicides, unintentional injuries, other acute alcohol-related causes, liver diseases, cardiovascular disease and other chronic alcohol-related causes. RESULTS After controlling for race and socioeconomic status, municipalities with greater beer consumption had higher premature mortality, with the model explaining up to 24% of all premature deaths. Beer consumption was also independently associated with homicide, liver diseases and cardiovascular disease. Neither unintentional injuries nor other chronic alcohol-related causes of mortality were significantly associated with beer consumption. CONCLUSIONS The population-level association between beer consumption and mortality may reflect population-level determinants of beer consumption as well as indirect health effects of alcohol consumption on persons who are not heavy drinkers.

[1]  M. Trevisan,et al.  Average Volume of Alcohol Consumption, Patterns of Drinking and Risk of Coronary Heart Disease - A Review , 2003 .

[2]  M. Trevisan,et al.  Alcohol and cardiovascular disease--more than one paradox to consider. Average volume of alcohol consumption, patterns of drinking and risk of coronary heart disease--a review. , 2003, Journal of cardiovascular risk.

[3]  D. Cohen,et al.  The population consumption model, alcohol control practices, and alcohol-related traffic fatalities. , 2002, Preventive medicine.

[4]  R. Smart,et al.  THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ALCOHOL USE AND MORTALITY RATES FROM INJURIES: A COMPARISON OF MEASURES , 2001, The American journal of drug and alcohol abuse.

[5]  P. Gruenewald,et al.  Beverage-specific alcohol consumption and cirrhosis mortality in a group of English-speaking beer-drinking countries. , 2000, Addiction.

[6]  T. Stockwell,et al.  The relationship between alcohol consumption patterns and injury. , 1999, Addiction.

[7]  T. Greenfield,et al.  Beer drinking accounts for most of the hazardous alcohol consumption reported in the United States. , 1999, Journal of studies on alcohol.

[8]  D. Cohen,et al.  Alcohol availability and homicide in New Orleans: conceptual considerations for small area analysis of the effect of alcohol outlet density. , 1999, Journal of studies on alcohol.

[9]  David A. Leon,et al.  Alcohol and cardiovascular mortality in Moscow; new evidence of a causal association. , 1998, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[10]  H M Rosenberg,et al.  Age standardization of death rates: implementation of the year 2000 standard. , 1998, National vital statistics reports : from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, National Vital Statistics System.

[11]  A. Nemtsov Alcohol-related harm and alcohol consumption in Moscow before, during and after a major anti-alcohol campaign. , 1998, Addiction.

[12]  Lening Zhang,et al.  The nexus between alcohol and violent crime. , 1997, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.

[13]  Alan D. Lopez,et al.  Global mortality, disability, and the contribution of risk factors: Global Burden of Disease Study , 1997, The Lancet.

[14]  R. Smart,et al.  Alcohol-related measures as factors in traffic fatalities. , 1996, Journal of studies on alcohol.

[15]  P. Gruenewald,et al.  The relationship of alcohol sales to cirrhosis mortality. , 1995, Journal of studies on alcohol.

[16]  P. Gruenewald,et al.  Suicide rates and alcohol consumption in the United States, 1970-89. , 1995, Addiction.

[17]  T. Norström,et al.  Prevention strategies and alcohol policy. , 1995, Addiction.

[18]  C. Sempos,et al.  Alcohol consumption and all-cause mortality. , 1995, International journal of epidemiology.

[19]  T. C. Timmreck,et al.  Basic epidemiological methods and biostatistics : a practical guidebook , 1995 .

[20]  R. Mann,et al.  The relationship between alcohol-related traffic fatalities and per capita consumption of alcohol, Ontario, 1957-1983. , 1988, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[21]  O. Skog Trends in alcohol consumption and violent deaths. , 1986, British journal of addiction.

[22]  D E Berger,et al.  Alcoholic beverage preferences of drinking-driving violators. , 1985, Journal of studies on alcohol.

[23]  O J Skog,et al.  The collectivity of drinking cultures: a theory of the distribution of alcohol consumption. , 1985, British journal of addiction.

[24]  J Rehm,et al.  Average volume of alcohol consumption, patterns of drinking, and all-cause mortality: results from the US National Alcohol Survey. , 2001, American journal of epidemiology.

[25]  P. Anderson Alcohol, cardiovascular diseases and public health policy. , 1998, Novartis Foundation symposium.

[26]  S. Wannamethee,et al.  The J-shaped curve and changes in drinking habit. , 1998, Novartis Foundation symposium.

[27]  M. Ashley,et al.  A public health approach to the prevention of alcohol-related health problems. , 1988, Annual review of public health.