Publication:
Estimating average alcohol consumption in the population using multiple sources: the case of Spain

dc.contributor.authorSordo, Luis
dc.contributor.authorBarrio, Gregorio
dc.contributor.authorBravo, Maria Jose
dc.contributor.authorVillalbí, Joan R.
dc.contributor.authorEspelt, Albert
dc.contributor.authorNeira, Montserrat
dc.contributor.authorRegidor, Enrique
dc.contributor.funderPlan Nacional de Drogas (España)
dc.contributor.funderInstituto de Salud Carlos III
dc.date.accessioned2017-09-04T16:32:32Z
dc.date.available2017-09-04T16:32:32Z
dc.date.issued2016-06-02
dc.description.abstractBackground: National estimates on per capita alcohol consumption are provided regularly by various sources and may have validity problems, so corrections are needed for monitoring and assessment purposes. Our objectives were to compare different alcohol availability estimates for Spain, to build the best estimate (actual consumption), characterize its time trend during 2001-2011, and quantify the extent to which other estimates (coverage) approximated actual consumption. Methods: Estimates were: alcohol availability from the Spanish Tax Agency (Tax Agency availability), World Health Organization (WHO availability) and other international agencies, self-reported purchases from the Spanish Food Consumption Panel, and self-reported consumption from population surveys. Analyses included calculating: between-agency discrepancy in availability, multisource availability (correcting Tax Agency availability by underestimation of wine and cider), actual consumption (adjusting multisource availability by unrecorded alcohol consumption/purchases and alcohol losses), and coverage of selected estimates. Sensitivity analyses were undertaken. Time trends were characterized by joinpoint regression. Results: Between-agency discrepancy in alcohol availability remained high in 2011, mainly because of wine and spirits, although some decrease was observed during the study period. The actual consumption was 9.5 l of pure alcohol/person-year in 2011, decreasing 2.3 % annually, mainly due to wine and spirits. 2011 coverage of WHO availability, Tax Agency availability, self-reported purchases, and self-reported consumption was 99.5, 99.5, 66.3, and 28.0 %, respectively, generally with downward trends (last three estimates, especially self-reported consumption). The multisource availability overestimated actual consumption by 12.3 %, mainly due to tourism imbalance. Conclusions: Spanish estimates of per capita alcohol consumption show considerable weaknesses. Using uncorrected estimates, especially self-reported consumption, for monitoring or other purposes is misleading. To obtain conservative estimates of alcohol-attributable disease burden or heavy drinking prevalence, self-reported consumption should be shifted upwards by more than 85 % (91 % in 2011) of Tax Agency or WHO availability figures. The weaknesses identified can probably also be found worldwide, thus much empirical work remains to be done to improve estimates of per capita alcohol consumption.
dc.description.peerreviewed
dc.description.sponsorshipThe authors are grateful to Kathy Fitch for translation. This work was supported by Spanish Health Research and Development Strategy (PI13/00183; PI15CIII/00022), National Plan on Drugs (2015I040). Writing of the paper was also partially supported by a grant of the National Plan on Drugs (Res. 8-7-15. Secretaría de Estado de Servicios Sociales e Igualdad) to the Alcohol Work Group of the Spanish Society of Epidemiology.
dc.format.number1
dc.format.page21
dc.format.volume14
dc.identifier.citationPopul Health Metr. 2016; 14:21
dc.identifier.doi10.1186/s12963-016-0090-4
dc.identifier.e-issn1478-7954
dc.identifier.journalPopulation Health Metrics
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12105/4838
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherBioMed Central (BMC)
dc.relation.publisherversionhttps://pophealthmetrics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12963-016-0090-4
dc.repisalud.centroISCIII::Centro Nacional de Epidemiología (CNE)
dc.repisalud.centroISCIII::Escuela Nacional de Sanidad (ENS)
dc.repisalud.institucionISCIII
dc.rights.accessRightsopen accesses_ES
dc.rights.licenseAtribución 4.0 Internacional*
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/*
dc.subjectAlcohol
dc.subjectData sources
dc.subjectAvailability
dc.subjectSales
dc.subjectPurchases
dc.subjectConsumption
dc.subjectSelf-report
dc.subjectPopulation surveys
dc.subjectUnderestimation
dc.titleEstimating average alcohol consumption in the population using multiple sources: the case of Spain
dc.typeresearch article
dc.type.hasVersionVoR
dspace.entity.typePublication
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