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Effects of Minimum
Drinking Age Laws: Review and Analyses of the Literature from 1960 to
2000.
Reprinted with permission
from Journal
of Studies on Alcohol,
Supplement No. 14, pp. 206-225, 1994. Copyright by Alcohol Research Documentation,
Inc., Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies, Piscataway, NJ 08854
Objective:
The goal of this article is to review critically the extant maximum legal
drinking age (MLDA) research literature and summarize the current state
of knowledge regarding the effectiveness of this policy.
Method: Comprehensive searches of four databases were conducted
to identify empirical studies of the MLDA published from 1960 to 1999.
Three variables were coded for each study regarding methodological quality:
(1) sampling design, (2) study design and and (3) presence or absence
of comparison group.
Results: We identified 241 empirical analyses of the MLDA. Fifty-six
percent of the analyses met our criteria for high methodological quality.
Of the 33 higher quality studies of MLDA and alcohol consumption, 11 (33%)
found an inverse relationship; only 1 found the opposite. Similarly, of
the 79 higher quality analyses of MLDA and traffic crashes, 46 (58%) found
a higher MLDA related to decreased traffic crashes; none found the opposite.
Eight of the 23 analyses of other problems found a higher MLDA associated
with reduced problems; none found the opposite. Only 6 of the 64 college-specific
studies (9%) were of high quality; none found a significant relationship
between the MLDA and outcome measures.
Conclusions: The preponderance of evidence indicates there is an
inverse relationship between the MLDA and two outcome measurers: alcohol
consumption and traffic crashes. The quality of the studies of specific
populations such as college students is poor, preventing any conclusions
that the effects of MLDA might differ for such special populations.
PDF
110KB
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