Commentary on Savell et al. (2016): Alcohol producers as problem inducers.
نویسنده
چکیده
This is a timely and important report that focuses on a critical issue in the study of alcohol policy: what are the tactics of the alcohol industry and their impact on alcohol marketing policy? Savell et al. [1] demonstrate the utility of monitoring the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) activities of the alcohol industry, collecting qualitative and quantitative data about its modus operandi and studying its impact on policy. Beyond the documentation showing how the alcohol industry uses its CSR umbrella to hide its political agenda, the paper raises the critical question of whether the alcohol industry should be studied as an inducer of alcohol-related problems. An inducer, according to an unpublished manuscript by my late colleague Rene Jahiel, is a causal mechanism that is neither an agent, nor a risk factor, nor a vector, but one that coordinates these different factors to maximize exposure of susceptible hosts to a given agent. Entities that may function as inducers include large for profit corporations such as the transnational alcohol producers, whose marketing policy agenda is likely to enhance alcohol’s role as an inducer [2,3]. Alcohol marketing and sponsorship have become pervasive and insidious with the recent concentration of the alcohol industry into transnational corporations that have incorporated former national breweries such as Guinness and Budweiser into globalized portfolios [4]. Drinking patterns are no longer taught by the family and the community, but are now inculcated through sophisticated marketing strategies that associate alcohol with sex, romance, success and an affluent life-style that is often beyond the reach of most people. The formidable resources devoted to information dissemination and constituency building suggest that the industry knows that unregulated alcohol marketing is its main path to growth in alcohol consumption and profits. It is therefore strange that so little attention has been devoted to the study of the alcohol industry by social scientists, perhaps because their methods, theories and measures are inadequate to the task. If that is the case, what is needed is a new approach to policy research that includes industry activities as part of the policy environment and policy development process [3,5]. Regarding research agendas, to the extent that population measures are considered much more influential than individual level
منابع مشابه
Do Toxic Synergies of Underlying Etiologies Predispose the Positive Association Between Traumatic Brain Injury and ADHD?
OBJECTIVE In their meta-analysis, Adeyemo et al. reported a strong association between mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and ADHD. However, less is understood about why such an association exists. METHOD This commentary focuses on the underlying etiologies of both conditions to reveal potential toxic synergisms that could explain this association. RESULTS Alcohol and substance abuse are re...
متن کاملAddressing NCDs: Penetration of the Producers of Hazardous Products into Global Health Environment Requires a Strong Response; Comment on “Addressing NCDs: Challenges From Industry Market Promotion and Interferences”
Timely warnings and examples of industry interference in relation to tobacco, alcohol, food and breast milk substitutes are given in the editorial by Tangcharoensathien et al. Such interference is rife at national levels and also at the global level. In an era of ‘private public partnerships’ the alcohol and food industries have succeeded in insinuating themselves into the global health environ...
متن کاملThe Health Policy Process in Vietnam: Going Beyond Kingdon’s Multiple Streams Theory; Comment on “Shaping the Health Policy Agenda: The Case of Safe Motherhood Policy in Vietnam”
This commentary reflects upon the article along three broad lines. It reflects on the theoretical choices and omissions, particularly highlighting why it is important to adapt the multiple streams framework (MSF) when applying it in a socio-political context like Vietnam’s. The commentary also reflects upon the analytical threads tackled by Ha et al; for instance, it highlights the opportunitie...
متن کاملAlcohol and stroke: the splitters win again
Study of the relationships of alcohol drinking and risk of stroke can readily become mired in the labyrinthine interactions of drinking categorizations, non-linear associations, disparate cardiovascular conditions, and the heterogeneous types of stroke. This Commentary discusses the recent article by Larsson et al. (BMC Medicine 14:178, 2016). The authors split their material into separate meta...
متن کاملHojjat-al-Tafasir and Abdol Hojjat Balaghi’s commentary trends
‘Hojjat-al-Tafasir’ commentary is a ten volume commentary among Shiite contemporary commentaries. It has been written by an Iranian Persian scientist, Sayyed Abdol Hojjat Balaghi. Seven volumes assigns to commentary and the first two volumes is about general setting of descent of the Quran and its elements and tenth volume also belongs to complementary explanations. Sayyed Abdol Hoj...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید
ثبت ناماگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید
ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Addiction
دوره 111 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2016