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The impact of a community-based risky drinking intervention (Beat da Binge) on Indigenous young people

BACKGROUND: Alcohol misuse imposes substantial harm on Indigenous Australians whose health status is poorer than non-Indigenous Australians. Although Indigenous youth are over represented in Indigenous alcohol harms, few interventions addressing alcohol-related harm among Indigenous youth have been...

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Autores principales: Jainullabudeen, Thameemul Ansari, Lively, Ailsa, Singleton, Michele, Shakeshaft, Anthony, Tsey, Komla, McCalman, Janya, Doran, Christopher, Jacups, Susan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4696266/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26715449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-015-2675-4
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author Jainullabudeen, Thameemul Ansari
Lively, Ailsa
Singleton, Michele
Shakeshaft, Anthony
Tsey, Komla
McCalman, Janya
Doran, Christopher
Jacups, Susan
author_facet Jainullabudeen, Thameemul Ansari
Lively, Ailsa
Singleton, Michele
Shakeshaft, Anthony
Tsey, Komla
McCalman, Janya
Doran, Christopher
Jacups, Susan
author_sort Jainullabudeen, Thameemul Ansari
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Alcohol misuse imposes substantial harm on Indigenous Australians whose health status is poorer than non-Indigenous Australians. Although Indigenous youth are over represented in Indigenous alcohol harms, few interventions addressing alcohol-related harm among Indigenous youth have been evaluated. Given this paucity of evidence, a survey was designed to evaluate the effects of a whole-of-community, anti-binge drinking intervention for young people in an Indigenous community in far north Queensland, Australia. METHODS: A cross sectional, baseline-post intervention study assessed the impact of a two year anti-binge drinking intervention targeting young people (18–24 years). A survey was developed and implemented at baseline and again two-years post-intervention, administered by young local people employed as research assistants. Survey respondents were recruited through snowballing techniques. Survey items asked about respondents’ knowledge of binge drinking and standard drinks, involvement in alcohol-free social activities, frequency of short-term risky drinking (binge drinking), and mean alcohol expenditure during short-term risky drinking occasions. The intervention was called Beat da Binge. Two major events and multiple minor activities each year were implemented, focusing on drinking education, alcohol-free community-wide social events, and youth-specific sporting and social activities to facilitate self-empowerment. RESULTS: Beat da Binge was associated with a statistically significant 10 % reduction in the proportion of survey respondents who reported that they had engaged in an episode of short-term risky drinking, in the frequency of short-term risky drinking for all beverage types except wine (ranging from 4 % to 31 % reductions), in mean expenditure on alcohol during short-term risky drinking sessions ($6.25) and in the proportion of activities with family/friends that usually include alcohol (7 %). There were also statistically significant increases in awareness of binge drinking and standard drinks (28 % and 21 % respectively). In addition to alcohol-specific outcomes, there was a statistically significant 8 % increase in the proportions of respondents engaged in training as their main weekday activity, which was partly off-set by a 13 % reduction in those whose main weekday activity was family care or home-related tasks. CONCLUSIONS: Reductions in the proportion of survey respondents who reported binge drinking, along with increases in awareness and involvement in alcohol-free social activities suggest the community-based intervention was effective. The potential impact of sample selection and self-reporting limitations on results need further investigation. There is an urgent need for Indigenous, community-driven public health programs that are well evaluated to both improve Indigenous health and the strength of the current evidence base to inform future community interventions.
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spelling pubmed-46962662015-12-31 The impact of a community-based risky drinking intervention (Beat da Binge) on Indigenous young people Jainullabudeen, Thameemul Ansari Lively, Ailsa Singleton, Michele Shakeshaft, Anthony Tsey, Komla McCalman, Janya Doran, Christopher Jacups, Susan BMC Public Health Research Article BACKGROUND: Alcohol misuse imposes substantial harm on Indigenous Australians whose health status is poorer than non-Indigenous Australians. Although Indigenous youth are over represented in Indigenous alcohol harms, few interventions addressing alcohol-related harm among Indigenous youth have been evaluated. Given this paucity of evidence, a survey was designed to evaluate the effects of a whole-of-community, anti-binge drinking intervention for young people in an Indigenous community in far north Queensland, Australia. METHODS: A cross sectional, baseline-post intervention study assessed the impact of a two year anti-binge drinking intervention targeting young people (18–24 years). A survey was developed and implemented at baseline and again two-years post-intervention, administered by young local people employed as research assistants. Survey respondents were recruited through snowballing techniques. Survey items asked about respondents’ knowledge of binge drinking and standard drinks, involvement in alcohol-free social activities, frequency of short-term risky drinking (binge drinking), and mean alcohol expenditure during short-term risky drinking occasions. The intervention was called Beat da Binge. Two major events and multiple minor activities each year were implemented, focusing on drinking education, alcohol-free community-wide social events, and youth-specific sporting and social activities to facilitate self-empowerment. RESULTS: Beat da Binge was associated with a statistically significant 10 % reduction in the proportion of survey respondents who reported that they had engaged in an episode of short-term risky drinking, in the frequency of short-term risky drinking for all beverage types except wine (ranging from 4 % to 31 % reductions), in mean expenditure on alcohol during short-term risky drinking sessions ($6.25) and in the proportion of activities with family/friends that usually include alcohol (7 %). There were also statistically significant increases in awareness of binge drinking and standard drinks (28 % and 21 % respectively). In addition to alcohol-specific outcomes, there was a statistically significant 8 % increase in the proportions of respondents engaged in training as their main weekday activity, which was partly off-set by a 13 % reduction in those whose main weekday activity was family care or home-related tasks. CONCLUSIONS: Reductions in the proportion of survey respondents who reported binge drinking, along with increases in awareness and involvement in alcohol-free social activities suggest the community-based intervention was effective. The potential impact of sample selection and self-reporting limitations on results need further investigation. There is an urgent need for Indigenous, community-driven public health programs that are well evaluated to both improve Indigenous health and the strength of the current evidence base to inform future community interventions. BioMed Central 2015-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4696266/ /pubmed/26715449 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-015-2675-4 Text en © Jainullabudeen et al. 2015 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jainullabudeen, Thameemul Ansari
Lively, Ailsa
Singleton, Michele
Shakeshaft, Anthony
Tsey, Komla
McCalman, Janya
Doran, Christopher
Jacups, Susan
The impact of a community-based risky drinking intervention (Beat da Binge) on Indigenous young people
title The impact of a community-based risky drinking intervention (Beat da Binge) on Indigenous young people
title_full The impact of a community-based risky drinking intervention (Beat da Binge) on Indigenous young people
title_fullStr The impact of a community-based risky drinking intervention (Beat da Binge) on Indigenous young people
title_full_unstemmed The impact of a community-based risky drinking intervention (Beat da Binge) on Indigenous young people
title_short The impact of a community-based risky drinking intervention (Beat da Binge) on Indigenous young people
title_sort impact of a community-based risky drinking intervention (beat da binge) on indigenous young people
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4696266/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26715449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-015-2675-4
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