Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

America’s drinking problem

Increased alcohol consumptio­n has potential to affect health care costs

- By John Tozzi

Bloomberg News

Americans are drinking more than they used to, a troubling trend with potentiall­y dire implicatio­ns for the country’s future health care costs.

The number of adults who binge drink at least once a week could be as high as 30 million, greater than the population of every state except California, according to a report published Wednesday in JAMA Psychiatry. A similar number reported alcohol abuse or dependency.

Women showed the larger increase in alcohol abuse, according to the report.

“This should be a big wake-up call,” said David Jernigan, director of the Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, who wasn’t involved with the research. “Alcohol is our No. 1 drug problem, and it’s not just a problem among kids.”

While underage drinking has declined in recent years, adult consumptio­n increased across all demographi­cs. The jump was also especially large for older Americans, minorities and people with lower levels of education and income.

The rise is “startling,” said Bridget Grant, a researcher at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism and lead author of the paper. “We haven’t seen these increases for three or four decades.”

The share of adults who reported any alcohol use, high-risk drinking, or alcohol dependence or abuse increased significan­tly between surveys conducted in 2001-02 and follow-up surveys in 2012-2013. Researcher­s interviewe­d thousands of people in person with similar questions, offering a robust, nationally representa­tive look at how American drinking habits have evolved in the 21st century.

About 12.6 percent of adults reported risky drinking during the previous year in 2012-13, compared with 9.7 percent in 2001-02. Behavior was considered high risk if people exceeded four drinks in one day for women and five drinks for men at least once a week.

That 3 percentage point increase may not seem like a huge jump, but given an adult U.S. population of about 250 million, it represents roughly 7 million more people binge drinkingat least once a week.

The increase in alcohol abuse or dependence was even greater: Some 12.7 percent of respondent­s reported such behavior in the 2012-13 period, compared with 8.5 percent in 2001-02. That percentage increase is roughly equivalent to 10.5 million people at the current population. The surveys assessed abuse or dependence with questions like whether people had difficulty cutting down on drinking, or if they continued drinking even when it caused trouble with family and friends.

There’s no single explanatio­n for the increase. Researcher­s point to economic stress in the aftermath of the Great Recession; more easily available alcohol at restaurant­s and retailers; and the diminished impact of alcohol taxes.

The consequenc­es for health care, well-being and mortality are severe. Excess drinking caused on average more than 88,000 deaths in the U.S. each year between 2006 and 2010, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The total includes drunken driving deaths and alcohol-linked violence, as well as liver disease, strokes and other medical conditions.

“We pay for all of it,” said Jürgen Rehm, senior director of the Institute for Mental Health Policy Research at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto. The costs show up in higher health care needs, lost productivi­ty and the prosecutio­n of alcohol-fueled crimes from drunken driving to homicide.

Mr. Rehm said alcohol doesn’t command the attention of policymake­rs the way tobacco, illicit drugs or prescripti­on opioids have. There is no national strategy in the U.S. that matches high-profile efforts to combat opioids, smoking or illegal drugs. “Alcohol,” Mr. Rehm said, “we justtend to overlook.”

What can be done? Making alcohol more costly through higher taxes or setting minimum prices could reduce consumptio­n, said William Kerr, senior scientist at the Alcohol Research Group, a nonprofit research center primarily funded by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. In Canada, putting a floor under prices was linked to reductions in alcohol-related hospital visits. Limiting availabili­ty — by restrictin­g hours of sale or the number of liquor licenses, for example — would also reduce consumptio­n, he adds.

More medical screening could also identify people with risky drinking habits. That, however, would require a significan­t cultural shift in the U.S.

Americans tend to consider excess drinking a character flaw rather than a medical problem. Only about one-fifth of people who have reported alcohol abuse or dependency have ever been treated, Ms. Grant said. That compares with a treatment rate of about 60 percent for depression, she said.

“I think that there’s a lot of stigma still associated with it and people don’t want to talk to their doctors about it,” she said. “We haven’t done the job for alcohol that we’ve done with depression.”

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