Times Colonist

Pandemic drives many to drink, raising risks

- MONIQUE KEIRAN

Canada’s national guidelines for low-risk consumptio­n of alcohol recommend no more than three drinks a day for men, up to no more than 15 drinks per week.

For women, it’s no more than two per day most days to at most 10 drinks per week.

The guidelines, last updated about 10 years ago, are meant to inform drinkers that drinking above the suggested limits increases their risk for injuries and chronic diseases.

But recent research by the Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research at the University of Victoria shows the limits are too high.

Using 2014 data on B.C. hospitaliz­ations and deaths, the study looks at rates of illness and injury that can be attributed directly to alcohol among groups who reported different levels of drinking. The researcher­s found more than half of cancer deaths resulting from alcohol use occurred in people who drank within the weekly low-risk guidelines.

Eighteen per cent of conditions, such as liver cirrhosis, and 40 per cent of injuries, including motorvehic­le collisions, also occurred in people drinking within the guidelines.

In a way, it’s too bad the study wasn’t published three months earlier, before the start of the COVID-19 restrictio­ns and all that they led to. The authors had submitted the paper to the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs late last year, but peer review and the publishing process meant it appeared in June.

Some people may have adjusted their coping choices during the pandemic if they had known about the results. These souls may have been following the national low-risk drinking guidelines for years, thinking that their moderation was helping them to avoid health risks.

However, even if the study on low-risk drinking in B.C. had been published in time for the COVID19 shutdown, it’s likely others would have ignored it, remained unaware, or were too busy, overwhelme­d or stressed for it to have made much difference. They would still have lined up to stock up to drink up.

In mid-March, when the B.C. government banned large gatherings and closed nightclubs, bars, and dine-in restaurant­s to slow the spread of COVID-19, a run on B.C. liquor stores took place. Some panic buying may have occurred. Some stockpilin­g may have happened. The prospect was grim: uncertaint­y, job losses, mounting bills and declining incomes, weeks on end at home, stress …

The B.C. Liquor Distributi­on Branch reported near the end of March that sales “were up 40 per cent” for the month, an unpreceden­ted increase.

The trend continued. A Nanos poll conducted for the Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction in April showed that 25 per cent of Canadians aged 35 to 54 and 21 per cent of people 18 to 34 were drinking more during the lockdown. Reasons given included lack of routine, boredom, stress and loneliness.

Another survey in May suggested heavy drinking was highest among younger people and those worried about the pandemic’s effect on personal finances. Nearly 30 per cent of respondent­s aged 18 to 39 reported heavy episodic drinking at least once in the previous week.

Data from B.C.’s liquor branch confirmed increased consumptio­n here. The wholesale value of alcohol sold in March and April increased 17.5 per cent over the same period last year. With bars, restaurant­s and nightclubs closed, or offering limited deliveries or pickups, individual­s accounted for most sales.

Yet the study’s results are no surprise. They confirm for our region what other research has establishe­d generally and elsewhere. For example, in 2018, a global study analyzing levels of alcohol use and its health effects in 195 countries from 1990 to 2016 concluded that no amount of alcohol is safe.

The study found that alcohol consumptio­n was the leading risk factor for disease worldwide, accounting for almost 10 per cent of deaths among people aged 15 to 49.

The increased potential to develop cancer, other diseases and other risks of harm offset even the few and much-touted protection­s against heart disease that some moderate drinkers see.

Canada’s current recommende­d alcohol limits exceed those of most high-income countries, including the United States.

The B.C. study suggests the guideline limits be lowered. keiran_monique@rocketmail.com

 ?? DREAMSTIME, TNS ?? Canada’s guidelines for low-risk consumptio­n of alcohol might be too high, Monique Keiran writes.
DREAMSTIME, TNS Canada’s guidelines for low-risk consumptio­n of alcohol might be too high, Monique Keiran writes.
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