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Alcohol and Malt Liquor Availability and Promotion and Homicide in Inner Cities
Authors:Rhonda Jones-Webb  Pat McKee  Peter Hannan  Melanie Wall  Lan Pham  Darin Erickson
Institution:1. Division of Epidemiology, University of Minnesota, School of Public Health, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA;2. Division of Biostatistics, University of Minnesota, School of Public Health, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Abstract:We investigated the role of the alcohol environment in explaining disparities in homicide rates among minorities in 10 cities in the United States using 2003 data from the Malt Liquor and Homicide study. We hypothesized that (a) higher concentrations of African Americans would be associated with higher homicide rates, as well as higher alcohol and malt liquor availability and promotion, and (b) the relationship between neighborhood racial/ethnic concentration and homicide would be attenuated by the greater alcohol and malt liquor availability and promotion in African American neighborhoods. Hypotheses were tested using separate Poisson, linear, and logistic regression models that corrected for spatial autocorrelation. Census block groups served as the unit of analysis (n = 450). We found that higher concentrations of African Americans were associated with higher homicide rates as well as greater alcohol availability, especially malt liquor availability. The promotion of malt liquor on storefronts was also significantly greater in African American than in other neighborhoods. However, none of the measures representing alcohol or malt liquor availability and promotion variables changed the effect of neighborhood racial/ethnic concentration on homicide. Limitations and implications of our findings are discussed.
Keywords:homicide  alcohol availability and promotion  malt liquor  African American
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