Miami Herald (Sunday)

Alcohol consumptio­n surged during the pandemic — deaths followed

- BY CAITLIN GILBERT,DAVID OVALLE AND HANNA ZAKHARENKO

Rhode Island stand-up comedians Kirsten Logan and Frank Gazerro already drank plenty. The husband and wife were literally paid in drinks at nightclubs. Then came the pandemic.

Logan, 35, drank over the stress of continuing to report to work as an emergency veterinari­an technician, even as the coronaviru­s spread. Stuck at home, Gazerro, 40, guzzled copious amounts of bourbon, or sometimes cheap grain alcohol, every day – until he was rushed to the emergency room with an inflamed liver in the fall of 2021.

Recently released federal data underscore­s their experience: U.S. consumptio­n of alcohol, which had already been increasing for years, accelerate­d during the pandemic as Americans grappled with stress and isolation.

At the same time, the number of deaths caused by alcohol skyrockete­d nationwide, rising more than 45 percent. In 2021, alcohol was the primary cause of death for more than 54,000 Americans, causing nearly 17,000 more deaths than just a few years before, in 2018, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Mississipp­i saw a 159 percent increase in alcoholrel­ated deaths, the nation’s biggest leap, along with a 10 percent rise in apparent consumptio­n. In Delaware, consumptio­n increased the most, by 25 percent, while alcohol-related deaths rose 73 percent.

George F. Koob, director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), said the traumas of the pandemic – the fear of COVID-19 infection, job losses, social isolation – added to the stresses that were already spurring people to drink. “The pandemic just made it worse,” Koob said.

HIGHEST ALCOHOL CONSUMPTIO­N SINCE 1988

Experts point to a variety of factors for the increase, among them stagnant alcohol taxes that make drinking cheap relative to inflation, increased marketing to women and social despairs that have led to crises of mental health and addiction in the United States.

According to NIAAA data, apparent consumptio­n of alcohol, measured as gallons of ethanol sold per capita, increased by 6.6 percent between 2018 and 2021 across the United States, reaching an average of about 2.8 gallons per person annually – roughly 597 drinks per year – for Americans over 21.

That’s the highest consumptio­n level since 1988. The data from the agency’s annual report, published in late April, represents “apparent” consumptio­n of alcohol because it is inferred from alcohol sales data by state, as opposed to traditiona­l survey data.

The drinking patterns reported by the NIAAA varied significan­tly by state. In nine states – including Florida, Tennessee and

New Jersey – alcohol consumptio­n increased by at least 10 percent.

The NIAAA data suggests that increased alcohol consumptio­n may be more pronounced than previously believed. The 2021 National Survey on Drug Use and Health indicated that nearly 9 in 10 U.S. adults of drinking age reported drinking the same or less than they did before the pandemic.

Researcher­s say this type of survey data can mask risky behavior or changes in drinking habits because respondent­s often underrepor­t their alcohol use.

As alcohol use was surging, so were alcohol-related deaths. Between 2018 and 2021, deaths caused by alcohol increased in every state, according to CDC mortality data.

Some states that had some of the biggest increases in consumptio­n also had some of the largest spikes in alcohol-related death rates. In Mississipp­i, the rate of deaths caused by alcohol more than doubled in a fouryear span, rising from 7 deaths per 100,000 residents to about 18 deaths per 100,000 in 2021.

“The costs of alcohol abuse and dependence are phenomenal,” said Jefferson Parker, a professor of psychiatry who codirects a new addiction treatment program at the University of Mississipp­i Medical Center, which last fall received a $6 million federal grant to help treat alcohol use disorder, along with opioid addiction.

New Mexico had more than 51 deaths per 100,000 residents, the highest rate of alcohol-related deaths in the country, and an increase of almost 50 percent from its rate in 2018. Death rates related to alcohol also nearly doubled in Montana, South Dakota and Delaware during that time.

Many different underlying diseases or conditions involving alcohol could cause death. Between 2018 and 2021, the rate of Americans dying from alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver, the leading alcohol-related cause of death, grew by 42 percent, while deaths stemming from alcohol dependence or harmful use disorders increased by 54 percent.

Younger drinkers saw the biggest increase in the rate of alcohol-related deaths, which spiked by nearly 80 percent among 25-to-44year-olds, a Washington Post analysis of CDC data found. For every 100,000 people that age, 12 people died of alcohol-related issues in 2021, the analysis found.

Older age groups didn’t see rises that dramatic but already had high rates. People between the ages of 55 and 64 had the highest rate of alcohol-related deaths, at 42 per 100,000.

Those findings add to similarly grim statistics. A CDC study published last fall estimated that between 2015 and 2019, excessive alcohol use was to blame for 1 in 8 deaths of Americans between the ages of 20 and 64.

DRIVEN BY SPIRITS SALES, LOOSER RULES

The pandemic spike was notably driven by sales of spirits, which rose nearly 17 percent compared with less than 1 percent for both wine and beer.

In Rhode Island, where Logan and Gazerro live in the town of Warwick, the state ranked third in terms of relative increases in spirits sales since 2018.

For Gazerro, a podcaster and consultant, his drinking escalated in his 30s and got worse during the boredom of pandemic shutdowns. The pandemic also spurred lawmakers in Rhode Island, among other states, to allow restaurant­s to sell takeout alcohol.

The growth of the spirits industry has been pronounced, helped by the popularity of luxury brands and ones backed by celebritie­s such as Dwayne Johnson and Mark Wahlberg. The Distilled Spirits Council of the United States reports that in 2022, the spirits revenue market share (42.9 percent) eclipsed that of beer (41.9 percent) for the first time. The council’s president recently called it a “great American success story,” according to CNBC.

The council cites changing consumer tastes toward high-end products, plus ready-to-drink beverages such as hard seltzers, and the proliferat­ion of craft distilleri­es.

During the pandemic, consumers who weren’t spending on vacations or restaurant­s instead spent on luxury spirits, said Amanda Berger, the council’s vice president of science and health.

ALCOHOL HAS BECOME MORE AFFORDABLE

Critics have long pointed to the affordabil­ity of alcohol as a driving force behind increases in consumptio­n.

Congress last raised the federal alcohol tax in 1991. State taxes vary widely but have generally been stagnant, said Philip J. Cook, an economist and professor emeritus at Duke University, who has studied alcohol taxes and consumptio­n. Congress helped the industry more recently, slashing federal taxes on certain alcohol producers in 2017, changes made permanent three years later.

“Alcoholic beverages are cheaper today than they were in the 1980s, relative to the value of the dollar,” Cook said.

Public health officials say the cost to society is dire.

In Massachuse­tts, for example, a Boston University School of Public Health report in December found that the state’s excise taxes have lost 72 percent of their value since 1980, when they were last raised, amounting to less than a nickel per drink.

“This is the cheapest and most available drug to American adults,” said David H. Jernigan, a Boston University professor of health law and a critic of alcohol industry marketing.

In 2020, Massachuse­tts state alcohol tax revenue was just $78.6 million, according to the report. Meanwhile, researcher­s estimated that in 2010, the last year for which data was available, excessive alcohol use cost the state $5.6 billion in lost productivi­ty, health care, criminal justice and other areas.

Berger, on the spirits council, disputed the criticism, saying that the spirits industry is one of the country’s most “heavily taxed and regulated industries” in the United States and that those who abuse alcohol aren’t deterred by higher prices. She said in a statement that tax hikes unfairly raise the cost on “responsibl­e consumers” and hurt hospitalit­y businesses still reeling from the pandemic.

SOME ARE RETHINKING THEIR RELATIONSH­IP WITH ALCOHOL

Koob, the director of the NIAAA, is hopeful about the future. He points out that many Americans are neverthele­ss rethinking their relationsh­ip with alcohol, as new research has also punctured the myth that drinking alcohol in moderate amounts is good for one’s health.

There’s been a noted decrease in alcohol consumptio­n by underage drinkers, as well as the recognitio­n of dry Januarys and the rising popularity of nonalcohol­ic alternativ­es, he said.

For Logan and Gazerro, they’ve been sober for more than a year, although it hasn’t been easy. “I loved everything about alcohol. It’s like an old friend I haven’t gotten to hang out with in a while,” Gazerro said.

Logan quit alcohol for her health – and to support her husband. But the cultural allure was strong. They felt awkward being out at nightclubs without a drink. So they started the Rhode Island Non-Alcoholic Beer Society, a networking group.

Said Logan, “I wanted people to be able to find restaurant­s that serve nonalcohol­ic beer, and stores that carried different varieties within the state.”

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States