Americans Are Drinking a Lot – and It's Scaring Researchers
If you're an American and you drink alcohol, you're not alone. In fact, there are more people like you now than in the past. But with increased drinking comes increased health consequences – so much so that researchers are calling it a public health crisis.
Specifically, the portion of Americans consuming alcohol
during a year has increased 11.2 percent from 2001-2002 to 2012-2013
(65.4 percent to 72.7 percent, respectively). High-risk drinking ticked
up from 20.2 million Americans to 29.6 million Americans during this
period, and those diagnosed with alcohol use disorder rose from 17.6
million to 29.9 million Americans.
High-risk drinking was defined as four or more regular
drinks on any day for women, five or more for men, and exceeding those
limits at least weekly during the year. A person was considered to have
alcohol use disorder if they met criteria for alcohol dependence or
abuse in the past year.
The study took into account about 80,000 people's
individual interviews between several surveys, and was published earlier
this week in JAMA Psychiatry.
Women,
older adults, racial/ethnic minorities and people of lower income and
education levels saw the largest increases, save for a few exceptions.
"These increases constitute a public health crisis that
may have been overshadowed by increases in much less prevalent substance
use (marijuana, opiates and heroin) during the same period. ... Most
important, the findings herein highlight the urgency of educating the
public, policymakers and health care professionals about high-risk
drinking and [alcohol use disorder], destigmatizing these conditions and
encouraging those who cannot reduce their alcohol consumption on their
own, despite substantial harm to themselves and others, to seek
treatment," according to the study.
And it's not just the study authors who are concerned.
"This should be a big wake-up call," David Jernigan,
director of the Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth at the Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told Bloomberg. "Alcohol is our number one drug problem, and it's not just a problem among kids." He was not a part of the research.
It's estimated that 88,000 people die every year due to alcohol-related causes, reports the Washington Examiner – and people can't seem to agree on how to get a handle on them.
Why is this happening in the first place? There isn't one
root cause, Bloomberg reports. Researchers suggest economic stress
post-Great Recession could play a role, in addition to the improved
accessibility of alcohol at retailers and restaurants and weakened
alcohol tax impact. Today, alcohol is cheaper than it's ever been since at least 1950 in relation to average income.
No comments