The Norwalk Hour

U.S. drinking more now than just before Prohibitio­n

-

NEW YORK — Americans are drinking more now than when Prohibitio­n was enacted. What’s more, it’s been rising for two decades, and it’s not clear when it will fall again.

That’s the picture painted by federal health statistics, which show a rise in per-person consumptio­n and increases in emergency room visits, hospitaliz­ations and deaths tied to drinking.

The stats aren’t all bad. Drinking among teenagers is down. And there are signs that some people are taking alcohol seriously — such as the “Dry January” movement making the rounds on social media.

But overall, public health experts say America still has a drinking problem.

In the late 1910s, just before

Congress banned the sale and manufactur­e of alcoholic beverages, each American teen and adult was downing just under 2 gallons of alcohol a year on average.

These days it’s about 2.3 gallons, according to federal calculatio­ns. That works out to nearly 500 drinks, or about nine per week.

Historians say drinking was heaviest in the early 1800s, with estimates that in 1830 the average U.S. adult downed the equivalent of 7 gallons a year.

That waned as the temperance movement pushed for moderation, abstinence and, later, a national ban on the manufactur­e and sale of alcohol. In 1919, Congress passed the 18th Amendment, institutin­g the ban. It went into effect on January 17, 1920 — 100 years ago, this Friday — and lasted 13 years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States