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Patient views on 24 hour licensing: A qualitative study.

Patient views on 24 hour licensing: A qualitative study. Dr Lynn Owens Nurse Consultant & Honorary Research Fellow Authors: K Cobain (PhD Thesis) Lynn Owens, Munir Pirmohamed. NHS. Patients Views of Licensing Legislation. 24 hour opening hours in UK ?. Drinking is responsive to price.

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Patient views on 24 hour licensing: A qualitative study.

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  1. Patient views on 24 hour licensing: A qualitative study. Dr Lynn Owens Nurse Consultant & Honorary Research Fellow Authors: K Cobain (PhD Thesis) Lynn Owens, MunirPirmohamed NHS

  2. Patients Views of Licensing Legislation 24 hour opening hours in UK ?

  3. Drinking is responsive to price

  4. History – Availability v Taxation In the mid-18th century, gin became extremely popular as it was much cheaper to buy than beer. By 1740, six times more gin than beer was being produced, and of the 15,000 drinking establishments in London, half were gin-shops. The Gin Act 1736 imposed a prohibitively high duty on gin, but this caused rioting, and so the duty was gradually reduced and then abolished in 1742. The Gin Act 1751 was more successful: instead of a tax it restricted gin producers to selling only to licensed premises.

  5. Aims • Investigate the perceptions of drinkers as to the impact the new licensing law will have on; • Their drinking patterns • The drinking patterns of their families • The drinking patterns of their communities

  6. Method • Qualitative face to face taped Interviews • Three groups – (10 in each) defined as • Low risk = < 8 on AUDIT • Increasing risk= >8 on AUDIT and <30 SADQ • High risk= >8 on AUDIT and > 30 SADQ • Purposeful sampling - Age, gender, ethnicity etc. • Thematic saturation (Morse 1996) • Analysis conducted with QSR NVivo

  7. Results

  8. Results There were four main themes that emerged through the interviews: • Ambivalence; • Concern for young people; • Concern about crime and disorder; and • A belief that consumption would increase.

  9. Results • “I will drink a lot more…..If you know that you can like go and get it cheaper from anywhere at anytime. So there’ll be nothing limiting me and it will be causing problems as I’ll not be able to stop.” (Male, 54, Dependence) • “Well if I run out of drink, I’ll just be able to go out and get more, even in the middle of the night……So there’ll be nothing stopping me (Female, 42, Dependence)

  10. Results • “Our youths don’t sit outside having a mellow evening drinking, they drink standing at the bar, getting drunk” (Male, 54, dependence) • “Cos obviously alcohol makes some people violent, disturbances, so on and so forth, it could get quite heavy” (Male, Hazardous, 54)

  11. Conclusions • There is there a problem with denial • The Act did not mention health or public impact assessment. • The impact of the act on healthcare services has also been ‘mixed’. • One A&E department study showed an increase in alcohol related attendances and violence (Newton et al., 2007). • Decreases in alcohol-related violence in Merseyside, and another study based in Wales (Bellis, 2006, Sivarajasingam, 2007). A decrease of 15% in alcohol-related violence in Bellis study confounded by the corresponding implementation of a policing and enforcement campaign during the same time period.

  12. We have a problem and perhaps liberalisation is not the answer; or so our patients think

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