Abstract

BackgroundThere were 8758 alcohol-related deaths in the UK in 2015 and an estimated 1·1 million alcohol-related hospital admissions in England in 2014–15. Mass media campaigns are used to communicate public health messages at a population level but whether campaigns intended to reduce alcohol consumption achieve their aims is unclear. With a systematic review, we aimed to assess the effectiveness of mass media public health messages to reduce alcohol consumption and related harms. MethodsEight databases were searched (Medline, EMBASE, PubMed, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, Scopus, ASSIA, ERIC) with no date restriction (appendix) along with reference lists of eligible studies. Searches combined subject headings and terms for interventions and outcomes. English language reports of studies of any design and in any country were eligible for inclusion, provided they evaluated a mass media intervention targeting alcohol consumption or related behavioural, social cognitive, media, or clinical outcomes. Drink driving and college campus campaigns were ineligible. Studies were assessed for quality, data were extracted, and a narrative synthesis conducted. This study is registered with PROSPERO, number CRD42017054999. FindingsSearches produced 10 212 results, and 24 studies were included in the review. Most campaigns used television or radio in combination with other media channels, were conducted in developed countries, and were of weak quality. Of 13 studies that measured changes in alcohol consumption, two reported statistically significant reductions in consumption associated with exposure to campaigns, although only six campaigns directly aimed to achieve this effect. Three of four studies reported increases in treatment seeking or information seeking. There was mixed evidence from eight studies of changes in intentions, motivation, beliefs, and attitudes about alcohol. Campaigns were associated with increases in knowledge about alcohol consumption in five of eight studies, especially where levels had initially been low. Recall of campaigns ranged from 6 to 96% but was generally high in the 17 studies reporting this outcome. InterpretationMass media can improve alcohol-related knowledge and awareness but according to the available evidence does not appear to reduce consumption. Campaigns may have an indirect effect on behaviour by providing support for other policies more likely to reduce alcohol consumption. FundingNational Institute for Health Research Public Health Research Programme 13/163/17.

Highlights

  • Background There were8758 alcohol-related deaths in the UK in 2015 and an estimated 1·1 million alcohol-related hospital admissions in England in 2014–15

  • We aimed to assess the effectiveness of mass media public health messages to reduce alcohol consumption and related harms

  • English language reports of studies of any design and in any country were eligible for inclusion, provided they evaluated a mass media intervention targeting alcohol consumption or related behavioural, social cognitive, media, or clinical outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

Background There were8758 alcohol-related deaths in the UK in 2015 and an estimated 1·1 million alcohol-related hospital admissions in England in 2014–15. Effectiveness of mass media campaigns to reduce alcohol consumption and harm: a systematic review Division of Epidemiology and Public Health (B Young MSc, Prof S Lewis PhD, A Ashie MSc, T Langley PhD) and UK Centre for Tobacco and Alcohol Studies (B Young, Prof S Lewis, A Ashie, T Langley, Prof L Bauld PhD, M Stead BA, K Angus), University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK; MRC/CSO Social & Public Health

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