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APIS Announces
Update of Alcohol Policy
Information
The Alcohol
Policy Information System (APIS), a project by the
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism,
announced its latest update of state-by-state alcohol
policies. The January 1, 2008 update is now posted to
the site found at:
http://www.alcoholpolicy.niaaa.nih.gov/.
The update covers the period 1/2/2007 through
1/1/2008.
APIS is an online resource that
provides detailed information on selected
alcohol-related policies across the United States.
In all, the
update includes over 35 changes in State alcohol policy
statutes and regulations. Among the most
prominent of these changes are:
Health
Policy:
·
Four States
(Illinois, Indiana, Maine, and Oregon) and the District
of Columbia have adopted provisions that specifically
prohibit insurers from denying payment for insurance
benefits for losses due to intoxication of the insured
(also referred to as UPPL laws - Uniform Accident and
Sickness Policy Provision Laws). In all cases except
Maine, laws that specifically permitted denial of
insurance were repealed. Seven
States and D.C. have enacted prohibitions in the last
two years.
·
Colorado amended its
health insurance parity law requiring insurance
companies to provide alcohol-related coverage. Previous law
only required that insurers offer such
coverage.
Alcohol and
Pregnancy:
·
Two states,
Louisiana and Pennsylvania, have adopted laws imposing
reporting requirements on health professionals
regarding suspicion or evidence of alcohol use or abuse
by women during pregnancy.
Louisiana's law applies to physicians, and
Pennsylvania's law applies to health care
providers.
·
Two states,
Louisiana and Alaska have adopted alcohol and pregnancy
laws related to child abuse and child
neglect.
These laws pertain to clarification of rules of
evidence of prenatal alcohol exposure in child welfare
proceedings.
·
Alaska has adopted
a law that provides priority access to substance
abuse treatment for pregnant and postpartum women
who abuse alcohol.
·
Texas has adopted
a mandatory warning sign law related to alcohol
and pregnancy for on-sale retailers.
·
Minnesota has adopted
a civil commitment law for pregnant women who abuse
alcohol.
This brings to five the number of States with
laws that either involuntarily commit a pregnant woman
to treatment or involuntarily place a pregnant woman in
protective custody of the State for the protection of a
fetus from prenatal exposure to alcohol.
·
Louisiana has adopted
a criminal prosecution law pertaining to alcohol and
pregnancy. These provisions prohibit the use of
results of medical tests, such as prenatal screenings or
toxicology tests, as evidence in the criminal
prosecution of women who may have caused harm to a fetus
or a child.
Underage
Drinking:
·
Iowa and South
Carolina have adopted keg registration
laws.
·
Alaska has adopted
a law to impose criminal liability on those who host
underage drinking parties, and Illinois and Kansas
have strengthened their hosting laws.
·
Oregon and Utah
increased the applicable age of for their "use/lose"
laws (Loss of Driving Privileges for Alcohol
Violations by Minors) from 18 to 21, and South Carolina
adopted a prohibition against Underage Consumption of
Alcohol.
Alcohol and
Motor Vehicles:
·
Pennsylvania reduced its
BAC limit for operators of recreational
watercraft from 0.10 to 0.08 percent.
·
Wyoming made its
open container law applicable to all occupants of a
vehicle, bringing its law into conformity with Federal
standards.
Visit the
APIS website to obtain details on these important policy
developments and to review other changes in alcohol
policy across the country. http://www.alcoholpolicy.niaaa.nih.gov/
Many of these
changes are consistent with the goal of reducing
underage drinking and its consequences as well as
alcohol-related death and injury in the general
population.
This project
has been funded with Federal funds from the National
Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National
Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human
Services, under Contract No.
HHSN267200800007C
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