Ireland needs to “turn off the tap of cheap alcohol to some of the most vulnerable individuals” in society, the Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform has heard.
President designate of the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland Prof Frank Murray called for Government to significantly increase minimum alcohol prices “as a matter of the highest priority”, something he said would have “immediate and substantial” benefits.
He said minimum unit pricing as proposed under the Public Health (Alcohol) Bill, would have an immediate reduction in alcohol sales and an immediate reduction in hospital admissions.
Pointing to two regions in Canada where minimum unit pricing has been introduced, Prof Murray said a 10 per cent price increase had led to a reduction in consumption of 8 per cent and to a 32 per cent decrease in alcohol-related deaths within one year.
“Alcohol is no ordinary product...there is nothing else you get walking up and down the aisle of a supermarket that is more dangerous than alcohol,” Prof Murray said, adding that there was also a “big problem” around the availability of alcohol in supermarkets, convenience stores and petrol stations.
Source: Pamela Duncan, Irish Times, 18/07/14