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Mass. voters' mixed feelings on the alcohol tax

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Also: Can MDMA still win FDA approval? August 6, 2024 Hi CommonHealth reader, There's a lot of

Also: Can MDMA still win FDA approval? [❤️ Donate]( [View in Browser]( August 6, 2024    Hi CommonHealth reader, There's a lot of attention to the drug overdose crisis - and for good reason. Fentanyl can kill instantly. It often poisons people who don't realize what they're taking. And the impact is widespread. In the U.S., 42% of adults [know someone]( who died from an overdose. But every year, quietly and with less fanfare, more Americans [die from alcohol]( and the damage it can cause to the body than from opioids. Alcohol is the [top reason]( Massachusetts residents seek addiction treatment. And there were more emergency department visits due to alcohol use than opioids, [55,000 in 2019]( according to the most recent available state data.  I've been thinking about why excessive drinking gets comparatively little attention. Here's a start. Alcohol is a legal substance, it can be cheap, it's in our daily lives and is sometimes celebrated in popular culture, including as a way to cope with stress and even deeper psychological pain.  But [poll results]( released last week by Suffolk University suggest Massachusetts residents may be ready to take action on excessive drinking and alcohol addiction. Researchers surveyed a relatively small sample of likely voters, 500, but the results were striking. Roughly two-thirds of respondents said under certain circumstances they are willing to make alcohol a little more expensive, a move that [research suggests can contribute to curbing use](. Respondents were asked: Would they support a 10-cent tax increase, per drink, to address a state budget deficit? The results were evenly split and well within the poll's margin of error: 49% said no, 47% said yes, and 4% were undecided. (A 2010 ballot question to remove the state sales tax from alcohol[passed]( by a similarly tight 52%-48% margin.) But on a second question, respondents were asked if they'd support the same 10-cent tax increase if the revenue was designated to reduce underage drinking, fund prevention of substance use, domestic violence, suicide, and drug and alcohol treatment. This time, 67% of likely voters said yes, 29% said no, and 3% were undecided. "Giving the money to a broader array of causes is clearly more popular," said David Jernigan, a professor of health law, policy and management at the Boston University School of Public Health, who is a proponent of adding to the tax on alcohol. Jernigan used research funds to pay for the poll. "There are more problems that need to be addressed, and we're proposing to address more of them," he said. Robert Mellion, director of the Massachusetts Package Stores Association, said directing increased alcohol tax revenues to these problems is a wonderful concept, but the survey question is deceptive. State lawmakers ultimately decide how to spend those funds, and there's no guarantee how they'd use them. "On the public policy side, I get it. But no money is going to get directed where it needs to go," said Mellion. "Excise tax revenue goes into the general account, and that's the end of it." [Bills]( proposing an alcohol tax increase have included provisions to create a separate state fund for the revenues. Those measures have been tabled, year after year. Even if one passed, Mellion said the legislature has a history of using new taxes and fees for its own priorities. Mellion argues that an alcohol tax increase in Massachusetts would drive business to neighboring states with lower taxes or none at all. And, he said, his members are already hurting as more alcohol sales take place, illegally, online, and customers shift to cannabis. According to Mellion's numbers, retail alcohol sales are down 6-8% since Massachusetts legalized cannabis for recreational use. A 10-cent tax per drink would be a significant increase from the current roughly 1 cent excise tax on 12 ounces of beer, 6 ounces of wine or 1.5 ounces of whiskey, gin and other spirits. Still, the survey results suggest there's support for an alcohol tax increase if the money goes to specific programs. Martha Bebinger Reporter, Health Editor's note: We have a new address: newsletters@email.wbur.org. Be sure to add us to your contacts - or for Gmail users, move us into your primary folder - so you never miss a newsletter. Reply to this email if you have any questions; we'd love to help. This Week's Must Reads [Can MDMA still win FDA approval? Supporters rally as time runs out]( With support from both sides in Congress, advocates are still fighting to get the psychedelic drug approved as a mental health treatment, despite its rejection by the FDA's advisory committee in June. [Read more.]( [Can MDMA still win FDA approval? Supporters rally as time runs out]( With support from both sides in Congress, advocates are still fighting to get the psychedelic drug approved as a mental health treatment, despite its rejection by the FDA's advisory committee in June. [Read more.]( [A Michigan company wanted to buy all of Steward's Mass. hospitals. Steward said no]( A Michigan-based, for-profit health care company that specializes in distressed hospitals made a bid to buy all of Steward's Massachusetts hospitals out of bankruptcy, but the bid was rejected as not viable, WBUR has learned. [Read more.]( [A Michigan company wanted to buy all of Steward's Mass. hospitals. Steward said no]( A Michigan-based, for-profit health care company that specializes in distressed hospitals made a bid to buy all of Steward's Massachusetts hospitals out of bankruptcy, but the bid was rejected as not viable, WBUR has learned. [Read more.]( [New blood tests can help diagnose Alzheimer's. Are doctors ready for what's next?]( A new generation of blood tests can help diagnose Alzheimer's disease. But many doctors don't yet know how to use them. [Read more.]( [New blood tests can help diagnose Alzheimer's. Are doctors ready for what's next?]( A new generation of blood tests can help diagnose Alzheimer's disease. But many doctors don't yet know how to use them. [Read more.]( [Abortion with no medical help? It nearly doubled in 2023, study shows]( A study looks at the rate of self-managed abortion since Roe v. Wade fell. The study found that the use of mifepristone to self-manage abortion has nearly doubled from 6.6% in 2021 to 11.0% in 2023. [Read more.]( [Abortion with no medical help? It nearly doubled in 2023, study shows]( A study looks at the rate of self-managed abortion since Roe v. Wade fell. The study found that the use of mifepristone to self-manage abortion has nearly doubled from 6.6% in 2021 to 11.0% in 2023. [Read more.]( [More Vermont towns are turning to community nurses, offering free health care]( "Sometimes there are real medical needs, but more than anything you keep hearing about people who were isolated in rural Vermont - boy, are they isolated," nurse Sunny Martinson said. [Read more.]( [More Vermont towns are turning to community nurses, offering free health care]( "Sometimes there are real medical needs, but more than anything you keep hearing about people who were isolated in rural Vermont - boy, are they isolated," nurse Sunny Martinson said. [Read more.]( What We're Reading 📚 - Competing for two: Pregnant Olympians push the boundaries of possibility in Paris ([Associated Press]( - Puberty blockers ban is lawful, says [U.K.] High Court ([BBC]( - Politics is holding back the best tool for treating meth addiction ([STAT]( Your Health [Americans don't get enough sleep. Can magnesium supplements help?]( A lot of people are sleep deprived, according to the CDC. Some take supplements like melatonin to help. Now there's growing interest in magnesium as a sleep aid. But is there any evidence it works? [Read more.]( [Americans don't get enough sleep. Can magnesium supplements help?]( A lot of people are sleep deprived, according to the CDC. Some take supplements like melatonin to help. Now there's growing interest in magnesium as a sleep aid. But is there any evidence it works? [Read more.]( 🧠💥 Did you know...💥🧠 ...gymnasts like Simone Biles have to be practical experts in physics to pull off those astonishing flips and twists. NPR's Short Wave podcast [goes deeper on the science behind Biles' routine here](. 😎 Forward to a friend. They can sign up [here](. 🔎 Explore [WBUR's Field Guide]( stories, events and more. 📣 Give us your feedback: newsletters@wbur.org 📧 Get more WBUR stories sent to your inbox. [Check out all of our newsletter offerings.](   [Donate](   # # Want to change how you receive these emails? Stop getting this newsletter by [updating your preferences](.   I don't want to hear from WBUR anymore. Unsubscribe from all WBUR editorial newsletters [here](.   Interested in learning more about corporate sponsorship? [Click here](. Trustees of Boston University on behalf of WBUR, 890 Commonwealth Ave Boston, MA, 02215, US Copyright 2024 WBUR-FM, All rights reserved.

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