‘Think about if that’s the message you really want to send’: Health experts say Christmas cards featuring images of alcohol reinforce message that binge drinking is ‘harmless’
- Two council officers from Devon made the claim in the British Medical Journal
- Illustrations and texts portray alcohol as enjoyable and fun, they both said
- Experts have dismissed their intervention as ‘mean-spirited’ and ‘puritanical’
Christmas and birthday cards with images of alcohol encourage binge drinking, health officials have warned.
Writing in the British Medical Journal, two council officers from Devon said depictions of wine and beer on greeting cards ‘undermine public health messages’.
Experts have dismissed their intervention as ‘mean-spirited’ and ‘puritanical’.
Writing in the British Medical Journal, two council officers from Devon said depictions of wine and beer on greeting cards ‘undermine public health messages’
The opinion piece, written by Devon County Council’s Tracey Polak, assistant director of public health, and Virginia Pearson, chief officer for communities, public health, environment and prosperity, said Christmas and birthday cards ‘normalise’ heavy drinking.
‘Illustrations and texts portray alcohol as enjoyable and fun, and can range from a glass of champagne with the word ‘Cheers’ to those that are more excessive and encourage binge drinking.
‘Phrases such as ‘let’s get wrecked’, ‘all the gin’, ‘trollied’ are printed across illustrations of people clearly drunk, surrounded by empty bottles, drinking directly from a bottle, or in some case unconscious.
‘These cards reflect and reinforce a social attitude that excess alcohol consumption is acceptable and associated with celebration.
‘They influence views on drinking and reinforce this as a social norm.’ They said people in the UK buy more cards than any other nation – an average of 33 each a year.
‘Over 10million people across the UK are drinking at levels which increase their risk of health harms, and alcohol consumption is the leading risk factor for ill-health, early mortality and disability in those aged 15 to 49,’ they wrote.
‘While alcohol-related deaths and illness are increasing across the UK and Public Health England is running campaigns targeting excess alcohol consumption, these cards reflect that many people consider drinking to be harmless and fun.
‘Ultimately the responsibility for choosing cards lies with the purchaser so perhaps it is worth reflecting the next time that you choose one whether the message is one that you condone and wish to pass on.’
Frank Furedi, emeritus professor of sociology at the University of Kent, said: ‘This is typical of the puritanical, mean-spirited approach to everything in life that is dominating at the moment.
‘At the end of the day the idea that people’s behaviour is influenced by images on greeting cards is just crazy.’
A spokesman for the Alcohol Information Partnership, an industry group which aims to promote balanced debate about drinking, said: ‘The notion that people who send and receive cards like this cannot distinguish between public health advice and humour is far-fetched.
‘Insisting that all light hearted greetings cards must include public health messages is a pretty Grinch-like view of the world.’