What is the effect of industry- and public health-funded alcohol messages on reducing alcohol-related harms?

Revue de CCNMO
Type de document

Revue Rapide

État d’avancement de la revue

Terminée

Date d’achèvement

2026-04-30

Date de la recherche la plus récente

2026-02-19

Organisation

National Collaborating Centre for Methods and Tools

Nom de la personne-ressource

Dr. Sarah Neil-Sztramko

Courriel de la personne-ressource

neilszts@mcmaster.ca

Mots-clés

Adolescents, Adultes, Enfants d’ âge Scolaire, Personnes âgées, Usage de Drogues

Message clé

Messages to promote safe alcohol consumption may be more effective when they come from public health or non-profit organizations, than from for-profit commercial or crown corporations.

Référence

Neil-Sztramko, S.E., Clark, E.C., Miller, A.M., Traynor, R.L., Atta, A., Patel, P., Dobbins, M. (2026, Apr 30). Rapid Review: What is the effect of industry- and public health-funded alcohol messages on reducing alcohol-related harms? National Collaborating Centre for Methods and Tools’ Rapid Evidence Service. https://nccmt.ca/pdfs/res/alcohol-messages

Portée de la synthèse

Population: General population, student populations

Intervention: Intervention #1: Corporate social responsibility initiatives funded by industry or crown corporations (organizations with a dual responsibility for profit generation and public health and safety) reducing alcohol-related harms Intervention #2: Public health campaigns related to reducing alcohol-related harms Format can include social media, internet ads, television, radio, cinema, online broadcasting, newspapers and magazines, leaflets/booklets, direct mail, outdoor advertising, email and digital media.

Comparaison: Any comparator

Résultat: Alcohol consumption; alcohol-related harms or health service usage Alcohol-related social cognitive variables (e.g., knowledge, intentions, social norms) Exposure outcomes (e.g., campaign awareness, exposure, understanding)