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Nice to get a win for public health

Dr Ingrid Johnston and Professor Simone Pettigrew

 

We often say in public health that it’s a long, hard game. Sometimes it feels as though the wins are incremental at best, and all too rare. All the more reason then, to celebrate them when they do happen.

On Friday 17th July 2020, an opportunity to celebrate presented itself in the form of the adoption across Australia and New Zealand of clear, visible mandatory pregnancy warning labels on alcoholic products. This important reform will directly impact on Australia’s leading cause of preventable, non-genetic disability – Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder.

This welcome decision was nearly blocked by political lobbying from the alcohol industry.

The path leading up to this decision was a long, hard road, summarised here:

So by the time the 3 year transition period for mandatory labels ends in 2023, it will have been 17 years since the idea was first proposed. That’s a long, hard road indeed for something which will take up less than 20mm of an alcoholic beverage label and is a simple, inexpensive form of information provision to reduce alcohol-related harms.

Along every step of that road, public health, alcohol and FASD experts have worked tirelessly to ensure that we progressed along to the next step, responding to each incremental decision and argument. Not enough evidence that it’s necessary? We’ll get some more. Don’t think it needs to be mandatory? We’ll show you why voluntary isn’t working. Think it will be too expensive? We’ll show you it’s not. Think that contrast will be just as good as the colour red? We’ll show you why it’s not.

And all the way along, public health efforts were opposed by a strong and consistent campaign by the alcohol industry. In a somewhat curious move, the final communique from the Forum Ministers and the press release from Minister Colbeck’s office both specifically referenced attempts to push through the industry’s preferred label, despite clear evidence and recommendations from FSANZ and Government Departmental advice that it would be less effective and that arguments from industry about cost burdens were not justified:

The Australian Government proposed an amendment to remove the colour prescriptions for the label and instead to prescribe the pregnancy warning label to have contrasting colours in accordance with the general legibility requirements outlined in the Australia New Zealand Food Standards Code (1.2.1-24). This was not agreed but was supported by South Australia, New South Wales and Queensland.

Simultaneously, on the other hand, other Federal politicians chose to reference the triumph of evidence and public health over industry profits.

We join in saluting each and every one of the hundreds of organisations and thousands of individuals who have advocated for this simple but effective health measure, many of whom have been there since the beginning in 2006. We also acknowledge the persistence and hard work of many who work in government agencies such as FSANZ and Federal and state Departments of Health. Their names are rarely linked to these successes but their efforts are vital to achieving outcomes of this kind.

Public health is a long, hard road. The wins deserve to be celebrated.

 

Dr Ingrid Johnston is a senior policy officer at PHAA with a diverse background in public health both in Australia and overseas, including with government (State and Federal), academic, and community sector organisations. After many years working across forensic mental health, family violence, youth justice and prison health, Ingrid completed a PhD on adaptation of disaster response to climate change on remote Pacific islands and is on the Board of Australia’s Climate and Health Alliance.

Professor Simone Pettigrew is the Head of Food Policy at the George Institute for Global Health. Her broad areas of expertise include behavioural psychology, health promotion, health policy, communications, social marketing, and intervention research. Along with nutrition, her substantive areas of research include obesity, physical activity, alcohol consumption, smoking, active transport, and healthy ageing. Simone sits on numerous advisory committees and regularly performs research consultancies for NGO and government entities.

 

 

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