Title: Alcohol Consumption in BC
1Alcohol Consumption in BC
- Scott Macdonald, Jinhui Zhao,
- Basia Pakula and Tim Stockwell
- Centre for Addictions Research, University of
Victoria
2Purpose
- To assemble a database that can be used for a
variety of research purposes, such as to examine
trends, differences between geographic regions,
reasons for them and harms related to alcohol -
3Advantages of aggregated data on consumption of
alcohol
- Most accurate reflection of actual alcohol
consumption in populations (more accurate than
population surveys) - Most useful indicator to assess the impact of
population level interventions - Can be used to justify the allocation of programs
and services
4Current procedures and limitations for provincial
reporting of alcohol sales data
- Statistics Canada estimates per adult absolute
alcohol consumption every year for each province - Crude conversion factors are used to estimate
absolute alcohol consumption rather than exact
conversions based on each product type - Sales by U-brews are missing
- Sales from home brew, duty free sales and illegal
sources (i.e., stills and illegal importation)
are missing - No breakdowns of differences within each province
is available - No seasonal effects reported
5Research questions in BC
- What are the trends in per adult consumption of
alcohol for Canada and BC? - What is the accuracy of estimates by Statistics
Canada? - What are the seasonal variations, differences by
source of sales and across geographic regions of
per adult alcohol consumption? - Have there been major market shifts associated
with privatization? - How is per adult consumption related to selected
demographic characteristics?
6Multiple Data Sources
- All recorded alcohol sales in litres of absolute
alcohol from on and off premise outlets (Liquor
Distribution Branch). - U-Brew and U-Vint sales in litres was converted
to absolute alcohol by 5 for beer and 12 for
wine (Liquor Control and Licensing Branch) - Weight of wine making grapes was converted to
litres by the formula 65 pounds22.5 litres (BC
Wine Grape Council) - Home brew from kits is currently being estimated
from a survey of sales by grocery stores - Illegal seizures of alcohol for 3 month periods
has been requested (Solicitor General)
7Methods for per adult consumption
- Alcohol sales data was converted to litres of
absolute alcohol for each individual product and
summed - Per adult consumption was calculated by dividing
the total absolute alcohol in each geographic
region by the population aged 15 or older - Sales data was obtained by municipalities and
aggregated into Health Areas - When municipalities included more than one Health
Area, sales data was allocated based on the
population proportions of each Health Area - Sales data for the last 3 months of 2007 was
estimated.
8Per adult absolute alcohol consumption in BC and
Canada, fiscal years 1997-2006
Source Statistics Canada estimates are based on
sales data by fiscal years 1997-2006. The BC
Pilot figures are by calendar years 2002-2005 and
are based on sales and U-brew/U-Vin data obtained
from the Liquor Distribution Branch. Home brew,
duty free sales and illegal sales not included in
all data.
9Underestimation effects
- Statistics Canada data (a) uses conservative
conversion factors to translate consumption into
absolute alcohol, and (b) excludes U-brew data - Both data sources exclude home brew, duty free
sales and illegal sales. True consumption is
likely 10-15 higher than the BC figures
10Comparison of Statistics Canada conversion
factors to actual alcohol content by beverage
categories
11Per Capita Sale Alcohol in BC by Quarter,
2002-2007
12Percent Alcohol Consumed by Source BC in 2007
Missing is home made from beer and wine kits
(about 5) and illegal sales (lt1)
13Number of government and private liquor stores in
BC in 2002-05
14Per Adult Alcohol Sales from Government and
Private Liquor Stores in BC, 2002-2007
15Per adult alcohol sales from government and
private take out establishments in BC
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18Factors related to alcohol consumption
- Based on population surveys, younger populations
and those with a higher male to female ratio
drink more alcohol
19Relationship between per adult consumption and
adult sex ratio for 28 regions
20Relationship between per adult alcohol
consumption and ratio of adult population aged
20-29
21Understanding Tourism The relationship between
the ratio of beer consumption (litres) for summer
vs. winter and the ratio of room revenue for
summer vs. winter at the regional districts in BC
in 2005
22Conclusion
- Alcohol consumption varies considerably across BC
districts and is significantly related to the
demographic composition of the districts (i.e.,
age and sex distributions). Excess summer sales
are largely due to tourism effects.
23Future directions
- Improve validity of measures by estimating
tourism effects, home brew, duty free sales and
illegal sales - Assess relationships between alcohol consumption
with mortality/morbidity and other harms - Assess consumption of less expensive beverages
(per litre of absolute alcohol) across districts - Investigate impact of private outlets on alcohol
consumption and problems - Encourage Canadian partners to collect similar
types of data in other provinces