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For full versions of posted research articles readers are encouraged to email requests for "electronic reprints" (text file, PDF files, FAX copies) to the corresponding or lead author, who is highlighted in the posting.
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Thursday, February 24, 2011
The association between alcohol outlet density and assaults on and around licensed premises
To estimate the proportion of assaults occurring on or around licensed premises, determine whether assaults are more likely to happen around licensed premises than elsewhere and estimate the effect of additional alcohol outlets (outlet density) on the incidence of assault.
Clusters of licensed premises in the Sydney Local Government Area (LGA) were identified. The proportion of
recorded assault incidents within 20, 50, 100 and 200 metre buffer zones around the licensed premises was calculated
and compared with the proportion of land area covered by the buffer. The incidence of recorded assaults as a function of
increasing counts of alcohol outlets was also examined.
Assaults were found to be highly concentrated around licensed premises. Assaults tend to cluster around George Street in the central business district (CBD), Darlinghurst Road in Kings Cross, Oxford Street in Darlinghurst, King Street in Newtown and Glebe Point Road in Glebe. The highest concentrations of assault are in Kings Cross, Oxford Street in Darlinghurst and along George Street in the CBD. More than half of the assaults recorded by police in the Sydney CBD occur within 50 metres of a liquor outlet. Only 3 per cent of the Sydney LGA is within 20 metres of a liquor outlet, yet 37 per cent of assaults in Sydney LGA occurred in this space.
The results suggest that each additional alcohol outlet per hectare in the Sydney LGA will result, on average, in 4.5 additional assaults per annum.
Limiting the density of alcohol outlets may help limit the incidence of assault.
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