The Scotsman

Scotland’s attitude to alcohol must change

Minimum unit pricing of alcohol has resulted in a fall in sales, but more must be done

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Given that the average person in Scotland buys more than the recommende­d intake of alcohol on a weekly basis, there really is no denying that this country has a drink problem and that there is a pressing need to do something about it. The most dramatic step taken by the Scottish Government to date has been the introducti­on of minimum unit pricing for alcohol, a controvers­ial measure but one which was credited with a 7.6 per cent fall in shop sales, according to a study published in the BMJ journal.

However, while a minimum price is a way of using market forces to improve our nation’s health, it was never going to be the solution all by itself. What is required is a broad change in attitudes towards alcohol within society. Too many young people still appear to think that getting drunk is a good idea and underage drinking is a serious problem.

Even in the Borders town of Melrose, there are calls for teenagers to be banned from celebratin­g Hogmanay because their “intimidati­ng” drunken behaviour is so bad that it is putting off tourists. A new study, based on interviews with 50 youths aged 13 to 17 who drink alcohol, found that there had been no impact of minimum pricing on their consumptio­n. While this is a small number of people on which to draw conclusion­s about behaviour on a national scale, the research, as Alcohol Focus Scotland said, should be “concerning”. “The apparent ease with which these young people are able to acquire alcohol raises serious questions about enforcemen­t of existing licensing legislatio­n and age-verificati­on arrangemen­ts which are there to protect young people,” said the group’s Alison Douglas.

There are some who will regard any government interferen­ce with our drinking habits as an infringeme­nt on civil liberties by a ‘nanny state’. As ever, the trick is to find the balance between helping people do what they would probably accept is the right thing and allowing them to make their own decisions.

While further state interventi­on may be required before Scotland learns to drink in a reasonably responsibl­e way, there is a limit to how much politician­s can do using legislatio­n and the level of such interferen­ce the public will tolerate.

However, politician­s and other leading figures in society can and should try to bring about a cultural change in how people in Scotland, particular­ly the young generation, view alcohol.

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