What Works to Reduce Excessive Alcohol Use
Community Strategies
Resources on Community Strategies to Reduce Excessive Alcohol Use
- The Guide to Community Preventive Services: Preventing Excessive Alcohol Consumption
- CDC Fact Sheet: Preventing Excessive Alcohol Use
- CDC Prevention Status Reports for 50 states and Washington, DC: Excessive Alcohol Use
- Webinar: Cancer – What’s Alcohol Use Got to Do With It?
- Regulating Alcohol Outlet Density: An Action Guide
- Reducing Alcohol-Related Harms Through Commercial Host Liability
- Web Tool: Consumer Costs and Job Impacts from State Alcohol Tax Increases
The strategies listed below can help communities create social and physical environments that reduce excessive alcohol use. These strategies are recommended by the Community Preventive Services Task Force, an independent, nonfederal, unpaid panel of public health and prevention experts, based on systematic reviews of their effectiveness in reducing excessive alcohol use and related harms, including deaths due to excessive drinking.5
Increase Alcohol Taxes
Alcohol taxes increase the price of alcohol at the federal, state, or local level on beer, wine, or distilled spirits. Increasing the price of alcohol by 10% would be expected to reduce overall alcohol consumption by an average of about 7% across beverage types. The more you increase the price on alcohol, the more you reduce excessive alcohol use and related harms.5
Regulate Alcohol Outlet Density
Alcohol outlet density means the number and concentration of alcohol retailers (such as bars, restaurants, and liquor stores) in an area. Reducing alcohol outlet density can help reduce excessive alcohol use and related harms. City, county, or state governments can regulate the number of places that sell alcohol through licensing or zoning processes.5
Commercial Host “Dram Shop” Liability Laws
Laws that hold alcohol retail establishments liable (at fault) for injuries or harms caused by illegal sales or service to intoxicated or underage (younger than 21 years of age) customers help reduce harms from excessive alcohol use, including deaths from motor vehicle crashes.5
Maintain or Limit Days or Hours of Sale
States or communities may limit the days or the hours that alcohol can legally be sold or served. States that have repealed bans on Sunday alcohol sales have experienced an increase in alcohol-related harms (such as, motor vehicle crash deaths) on the day when alcohol sales were previously prohibited. Similarly, increasing hours of sale by two hours or more has been associated with an increase in harms related to excessive alcohol consumption (such as motor vehicle crash injuries).5
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) Recommendations Related to Alcohol Use
Alcohol Misuse: Screening and Behavioral Counseling Interventions in Primary Care
“The USPSTF recommends that clinicians screen adults aged 18 years or older for alcohol misuse and provide persons engaged in risky or hazardous drinking with brief behavioral counseling interventions to reduce alcohol misuse.”
Grade: B Recommendation.
Enhance Enforcement of Laws Prohibiting Sales to Minors
The minimum legal drinking age is 21 years in all states in the United States. Enhanced enforcement of the minimum legal drinking age can reduce sales to minors (younger than 21 years) in retail settings (such as bars, restaurants, and liquor stores), thereby helping to reduce youth access to alcohol.5
Clinical Strategies
Alcohol Screening and Brief Intervention Provided in Clinical Settings
Health care providers can screen adults, including pregnant women, for excessive alcohol use to identify people whose levels or patterns of alcohol use place them at increased risk of alcohol-related harms.10 Health care providers can then recommend or offer treatment services to those at risk. Brief counseling interventions for adults who drink excessively have been found to positively affect several patterns of excessive drinking, including heavy episodic (binge) drinking and high average weekly intake of alcohol.5
Resources for Alcohol Screening and Brief Intervention
- The Community Guide: Preventing Excessive Alcohol Consumption: Electronic Screening and Brief Intervention (e-SBI)
- CDC’s Alcohol Screening and Brief Intervention Efforts
- CDC guide: Planning and Implementing Screening and Brief Intervention for Risky Alcohol Use: A Step-by-Step Guide for Primary Care Practices [PDF-2.1MB]
Alcohol Screening and Brief Intervention Provided Using Electronic Devices (e-SBI)
The Community Preventive Services Task Force recommends the use of electronic devices such as computers, telephones, or mobile devices to provide screening and brief intervention for excessive alcohol use.5 Instead of having a clinician offer screening and brief intervention face-to-face, Electronic Screening and Brief Intervention (e-SBI) uses electronic devices such as computers, telephones, or mobile devices to provide information and personalized feedback about the risks and consequences of excessive alcohol use and offer advice designed to reduce excessive alcohol use.
- Page last reviewed: August 10, 2015
- Page last updated: August 17, 2015
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