Alcohol Kills 75,000 Annually, Says CDC
An estimated 75,000 Americans die each year because of alcohol use,
with drinking-related diseases cutting their lives short by an average
of 30 years, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC).
Reuters reported Sept. 23 that the CDC estimated that 34,833 Americans
died in 2001 from alcohol-related diseases like cirrhosis of the
liver and cancer, while an additional 40,933 died in alcohol-related
car crashes and other accidents. Of those who died from alcohol-related
causes, 72 percent were men, and people under age 21 accounted for
6 percent of deaths.
Men averaging more than two alcoholic drinks daily or consuming
four of more drinks per occasion were considered heavy drinkers
by the researchers; for women, the standard was averaging three
drinks per sitting or a drink a day or more.
"These results emphasize the importance of adopting effective
strategies to reduce excessive drinking, including increasing alcohol
excise taxes and screening for alcohol misuse in clinical settings,"
the study said.
Editor's note: There are proven public policies that, if implemented,
would reduce these harms from excessive alcohol. See Ten Policies
That Would Save Lives for more.
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