Alcohol Outlets, Neighborhood Retail Environments, and Pedestrian Injury Risk.

IF 3.2 3区 医学 Q1 Medicine Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research Pub Date : 2018-10-01 Epub Date: 2018-08-13 DOI:10.1111/acer.13844
Elizabeth D Nesoff, Adam J Milam, Charles C Branas, Silvia S Martins, Amy R Knowlton, Debra M Furr-Holden
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Background: Alcohol outlet density has been associated with increased pedestrian injury risk. It is unclear whether this is because alcohol outlets are located in dense retail areas with heavy pedestrian traffic or whether alcohol outlets contribute a unique neighborhood risk. We aimed to compare the pedestrian injury rate around alcohol outlets to the rate around other, similar retail outlets that do not sell alcohol.

Methods: A spatial analysis was conducted on census block groups in Baltimore City. Data included pedestrian injury emergency medical services (EMS) records from January 1, 2014 to April 15, 2015 (n = 848); locations of alcohol outlets licensed for off-premise (n = 726) and on-premise consumption (n = 531); and corner (n = 398) and convenience stores (n = 192) that do not sell alcohol. Negative binomial regression was used to determine the relationship between retail outlet count and pedestrian injuries, controlling for key confounding variables. Spatial autocorrelation was also assessed and variable selection adjusted accordingly.

Results: Each additional off-premise alcohol outlet was associated with a 12.3% increase in the rate of neighborhood pedestrian injury when controlling for convenience and corner stores and other confounders (incidence rate ratio [IRR] = 1.123, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.065, 1.184, p < 0.001). The attributable risk was 4.9% (95% CI = 0.3, 8.9) or 41 additional injuries. On-premise alcohol outlets were not significant predictors of neighborhood pedestrian injury rate in multivariable models (IRR = 0.972, 95% CI = 0.940, 1.004, p = 0.194).

Conclusions: Off-premise alcohol outlets are associated with pedestrian injury rate, even when controlling for other types of retail outlets. Findings reinforce the importance of alcohol outlets in understanding neighborhood pedestrian injury risk and may provide evidence for informing policy on liquor store licensing, zoning, and enforcement.

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酒类销售点、社区零售环境和行人伤害风险。
背景:酒精出口密度与行人受伤风险增加有关。目前尚不清楚这是因为酒类销售点位于人流密集的零售区,还是酒类销售点造成了独特的社区风险。我们的目的是比较酒精销售点附近的行人受伤率与其他类似的不卖酒精的零售店附近的行人受伤率。方法:对巴尔的摩市人口普查街区组进行空间分析。数据包括2014年1月1日至2015年4月15日的行人伤害急救医疗服务(EMS)记录(n = 848);获得营业场所外(726个)和营业场所内(531个)酒精饮料销售点的地点;街角(n = 398)和便利店(n = 192)不卖酒。在控制关键混杂变量的情况下,采用负二项回归来确定零售店数量与行人伤害之间的关系。对空间自相关性进行了评估,并对变量选择进行了相应调整。结果:在控制便利商店、街角商店和其他混杂因素的情况下,每增加一个店外酒精门店,社区行人受伤率增加12.3%(发病率比[IRR] = 1.123, 95%可信区间[CI] = 1.065, 1.184, p)。结论:店外酒精门店与行人受伤率相关,即使在控制其他类型零售店的情况下也是如此。研究结果强调了酒类商店在了解社区行人伤害风险方面的重要性,并可能为酒类商店许可、分区和执法政策提供证据。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
9.40%
发文量
219
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research''s scope spans animal and human clinical research, epidemiological, experimental, policy, and historical research relating to any aspect of alcohol abuse, dependence, or alcoholism. This journal uses a multi-disciplinary approach in its scope of alcoholism, its causes, clinical and animal effect, consequences, patterns, treatments and recovery, predictors and prevention.
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