Scoping response system management of alcohol's harm to others in lower middle income countries

AIMS - As part of the WHO Harm from others' drinking project, Thailand, Sri Lanka, India, Chile, Nigeria and Vietnam undertook scoping studies to examine: which service agencies in low and middle income countries responded to people affected by others' drinking; how commonly key informants...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Laslett, Anne-Marie, Waleewong, O., Obot, I., Benegal, V., Hettige, S., Florenzano, R., Hanh, H., Hanh, V., Rao, G., Room, R.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32789
_version_ 1848753761018707968
author Laslett, Anne-Marie
Waleewong, O.
Obot, I.
Benegal, V.
Hettige, S.
Florenzano, R.
Hanh, H.
Hanh, V.
Rao, G.
Room, R.
author_facet Laslett, Anne-Marie
Waleewong, O.
Obot, I.
Benegal, V.
Hettige, S.
Florenzano, R.
Hanh, H.
Hanh, V.
Rao, G.
Room, R.
author_sort Laslett, Anne-Marie
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description AIMS - As part of the WHO Harm from others' drinking project, Thailand, Sri Lanka, India, Chile, Nigeria and Vietnam undertook scoping studies to examine: which service agencies in low and middle income countries responded to people affected by others' drinking; how commonly key informants from these agencies indicated alcohol was part of the problems they managed; and whether any routine reporting systems collected information on alcohol's harm to others (AHTO) and the types and examples of harms experienced across the six countries. METHODS - Researchers synthetised within country peer-review literature, reports, news and agency website information. Additionally, researchers interviewed key informants to investigate current structures, functions and practices of service agencies, and in particular their recording practices surrounding cases involving others' drinking. RESULTS - 111 key informants agreed to participate from 91 purposively selected agencies from health, social protection, justice and police, and 'other' sectors. National and provincial level data, as well as state-run and civil society agency data were collected. Diverse service response systems managed AHTO in the different countries. A large range in the percentage of all cases attributed to AHTO was identified. Case story examples from each country illustrate the different responses to, and the nature of, many severe problems experienced because of others' drinking. CONCLUSIONS - AHTO was a major issue for service systems in LMIC, and significantly contributed to their workload, yet, very few recording systems routinely collected AHTO data. Recommendations are outlined to improve AHTO data collection across multiple sectors and enable LMIC to better identify and respond to AHTO.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:29:39Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-32789
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:29:39Z
publishDate 2016
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-327892017-09-13T15:25:36Z Scoping response system management of alcohol's harm to others in lower middle income countries Laslett, Anne-Marie Waleewong, O. Obot, I. Benegal, V. Hettige, S. Florenzano, R. Hanh, H. Hanh, V. Rao, G. Room, R. AIMS - As part of the WHO Harm from others' drinking project, Thailand, Sri Lanka, India, Chile, Nigeria and Vietnam undertook scoping studies to examine: which service agencies in low and middle income countries responded to people affected by others' drinking; how commonly key informants from these agencies indicated alcohol was part of the problems they managed; and whether any routine reporting systems collected information on alcohol's harm to others (AHTO) and the types and examples of harms experienced across the six countries. METHODS - Researchers synthetised within country peer-review literature, reports, news and agency website information. Additionally, researchers interviewed key informants to investigate current structures, functions and practices of service agencies, and in particular their recording practices surrounding cases involving others' drinking. RESULTS - 111 key informants agreed to participate from 91 purposively selected agencies from health, social protection, justice and police, and 'other' sectors. National and provincial level data, as well as state-run and civil society agency data were collected. Diverse service response systems managed AHTO in the different countries. A large range in the percentage of all cases attributed to AHTO was identified. Case story examples from each country illustrate the different responses to, and the nature of, many severe problems experienced because of others' drinking. CONCLUSIONS - AHTO was a major issue for service systems in LMIC, and significantly contributed to their workload, yet, very few recording systems routinely collected AHTO data. Recommendations are outlined to improve AHTO data collection across multiple sectors and enable LMIC to better identify and respond to AHTO. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32789 10.1515/nsad-2016-0043 unknown
spellingShingle Laslett, Anne-Marie
Waleewong, O.
Obot, I.
Benegal, V.
Hettige, S.
Florenzano, R.
Hanh, H.
Hanh, V.
Rao, G.
Room, R.
Scoping response system management of alcohol's harm to others in lower middle income countries
title Scoping response system management of alcohol's harm to others in lower middle income countries
title_full Scoping response system management of alcohol's harm to others in lower middle income countries
title_fullStr Scoping response system management of alcohol's harm to others in lower middle income countries
title_full_unstemmed Scoping response system management of alcohol's harm to others in lower middle income countries
title_short Scoping response system management of alcohol's harm to others in lower middle income countries
title_sort scoping response system management of alcohol's harm to others in lower middle income countries
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32789