The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Parents’ drinking habits ‘may be unchanged’

HEALTH: Concerns minimum pricing is having no impact on attitudes to alcohol

- TOM EDEN

A study into the impact of minimum pricing for alcohol has been unable to establish whether it has changed the dangerous drinking habits of parents.

Research by Public Health Scotland attempted to discover if the Scottish Government’s policy had any impact on the lives of children and young people within families affected by harmful alcohol use.

But workers who deal with families affected by a parent or carer’s drinking said they had seen no evidence of either a positive or negative impact on children.

Instead, they stressed persistent poverty and financial hardship continue to be a key issue in these young people’s lives.

The study was based on the responses of 42 people working in health and social care, and for charities and third-sector organisati­ons, who deal with alcohol abuse and the impact on families.

It had hoped to consider whether the introducti­on of a 50p minimum price per unit of alcohol has changed drinking habits and behaviour of those living with, or in close contact with, children and young people, and if it had affected their spending on drink.

The report states: “Participan­ts felt that poverty, together with the recent changes to the welfare system, was more likely to affect many of these families than any potential financial impact of minimum unit pricing.”

The findings also suggested the study – involving six focus groups and one interview between February and May 2019 – was carried out too soon to gauge whether the policy had resulted in any changes since it was introduced on May 1 2018.

Jane Ford from Public Health Scotland said: “Participan­ts felt that the negative impacts of poverty and recent changes to the welfare system were more likely to affect the families they work with than any potential financial impact of minimum unit pricing, whether positive or negative.”

“Poverty and recent changes to the welfare system were more likely to affect the families they work with. JANE FORD, PUBLIC HEALTH SCOTLAND

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