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Alcohol industry sponsorship associated with more hazardous drinking in sportspeople
While policy makers in Australia, the United Kingdom, and New Zealand debate whether alcohol advertising and sponsorship
should be banned from sport, new research provides evidence that alcohol industry sponsorship is associated with more
hazardous drinking in sportspeople compared to non-alcohol sponsorship.
Health scientists from Monash University, the University of Manchester, Deakin University and University of Western Sydney,
asked Australian sportspeople about their drinking behaviours, sport participation, and what sorts of sport sponsorship they
currently receive.
After accounting for other influences receipt of alcohol industry sponsorship in various forms was associated with
significantly higher levels of drinking. Receipt of similar forms of sponsorship from non-alcohol industries such as,
building firms, food or clothing companies was not related to higher drinking levels.
Of the 30 per cent of sportspeople reporting receiving alcohol industry sponsorship, 68 per cent met World Health
Organisation criteria for classification as hazardous drinkers.
The research, published online in the journal Alcohol and Alcoholism, is the first to compare alcohol industry sponsorship to
non-alcohol industry sponsorship.
Study lead Dr Kerry O'Brien said "The results will be unsurprising to sportspeople or the alcohol industry, but we wondered
whether the financial resources provided from non-alcohol industry sponsors might also increase drinking through the simple
provision of additional funds for young sportspeople to spend on alcohol. It didn't. It seems specific to alcohol industry
sponsorship."
The research comes on the back of recent recommendations from the British Medical Association, Australian Preventative Health
Taskforce, and New Zealand Law Commission to have alcohol advertising and sponsorship removed from sport in much the same way
as tobacco was decades ago.
Figures from marketing analysts suggest that major alcohol companies spend up to 80 per cent of advertising and sponsorship
budgets promoting alcohol via sports.
"Sport is being misused to promote alcohol to sportspeople and the general population. The public do not need more
encouragement to drink, and there are ways of replacing alcohol advertising and sponsorship dollars in sport," Dr O'Brien
said.
"Much like was done with tobacco, a proportion of the excise duty currently gathered by governments from alcohol sales could
be ring fenced (hypothecated) for funding sport and cultural events. This would replace alcohol industry funding many times
over," Dr O'Brien said.
Norway and France have had longstanding bans in place with little apparent effect on sport, and this year Turkey banned all
alcohol advertising and sponsorship of sport. France successfully hosted the 1998 FIFA World Cup with their alcohol
sponsorship and advertising ban in place, and currently host the multi-nation Heineken Cup Rugby competition, renamed the H-
Cup in France.
"The Australian Federal government is taking promising steps in allocating $25 million to a trial program replacing alcohol
industry sponsorship of community sports and cultural events, but it can be expanded considerably, and could be funded by
alcohol excise duty." Dr O'Brien said.
Deakin University scientist Dr Peter Miller said "This study provides new evidence of the harms associated with alcohol
industry sponsorship of sport and we believe that any sporting association serious about the well-being of young people
should support calls for governments to provide alternative funding. It's simply not worth gambling with their future for the
sake of some easy money."
Source: Monash University