Huddersfield Daily Examiner

More drinkers in hospital

CONCERN OVER RISE IN ADMISSIONS FOR ALCOHOLIC LIVER DISEASE

- By SAM BROOKE editorial@examiner.co.uk @examiner

EMERGENCY hospital admissions for alcoholic liver disease increased across Yorkshire last year - revealing the dire impact of heavy drinking during the pandemic.

Hospital trusts in West Yorkshire admitted 2,730 patients with a diagnosis of alcoholic liver disease in the year up to April 2021, NHS figures show - a record high since records began in 2016.

South Yorkshire admissions also increased from 2,070 year-on-year another record high - though incidents dropped slightly in North Yorkshire to 1,125. The NHS figures are rounded to the nearest five and count an admitted patient’s first period of care by a consultant.

Pamela Healy of the British Liver Trust said the figures were concerning as the Covid-19 crisis has exacerbate­d an alarming rise in the disease due to stress, loneliness and lack of support.

“Alcohol-related liver disease cases have been rising at an alarming rate across the UK for a number of decades and the impact of the Covid pandemic has only exacerbate­d this problem,” she said.

“Stress, loneliness and the lack of access to alcohol support services have resulted in many people drinking more alcohol and putting their livers at risk.

“Covid-19 restrictio­ns may have eased but now we’re starting to see the long-term effects of the pandemic in other areas of public health.”

The number of admissions with a primary diagnosis was declining in previous years, suggesting the pandemic could have worsened heavy drinking habits.

And the latest rise happened while emergency admissions fell across England for many other health problems unrelated to Covid-19 as people avoided hospitals to ease pressure on services and try to evade the virus.

Ms Healy called for the Government

to introduce a minimum alcohol unit price and reduce the ease of access to alcohol.

In July, Public Health England published a report showing there was a 20% increase in alcohol-specific deaths in 2020, to 6,983.

Alcoholic liver deaths - accounting for the vast majority - rose by 21% in 2020. The previous year the numbers went up by just 3%.

Rosanna O’Connor, director of drugs, alcohol, tobacco and justice at Public Health England, said at the time that the research suggested lockdown had affected heavy drinkers the most and that they were drinking more.

She added: “Liver disease is currently the second leading cause of premature death in people of working age and this is only set to get worse if the Covid pandemic results in a long-term increase in drinking.

“Tackling harmful drinking must be an essential part of the Covid recovery plan.”

 ??  ?? Emergency hospital admissions linked to heavy drinking have risen during the pandemic
Emergency hospital admissions linked to heavy drinking have risen during the pandemic

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