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From the UK: Drinking among young exaggerated as middle-aged habits cause alarm

The pictures regularly fill television screens regularly, especially around Christmas, of young people stumbling drunkenly down British streets in the early hours.

And they do this in considerable numbers. However, the bigger problem facing the National Health Service is not the alcohol consumption of the young, but those older in years.

In the latest Dr Foster Hospital Guide, statistics show one-in-10 of all A&E admissions for people in their early 20s are drink-linked.

However, far more surprisingly, one-in-five of all admissions to emergency wards among those aged 40-44 are directly related to alcohol.

“Public policy on drug and alcohol misuse has emphasised the dangers of binge drinking among the young,” says the body, adding that warnings about long-term drinking are long-established.

“However, serious alcohol and drug-dependency among the middle-aged has not been given the same attention. It is this, however, which is placing one of the biggest burdens on our health system in terms of use of hospital beds,” it went on.

“It’s all too easy to dupe ourselves that binge-drinking teenagers or stag and hen parties in their 20s are the cause of alcohol-related pressures on the health services,” said Matt Tee, chief operating officer at the NHS Confederation. “[These figures] put this myth firmly back in its place and makes it even more important that . . . we seriously examine the impact our drinking habits have on our health – and on our health service.”

Nearly one-in-10 of all admissions in the last year – 415,131 cases – are blamed on alcohol or drug over-use, while 533,000 patients with a known problem with either, or both, were admitted to hospital wards over the last three years.

A life of drink
Over 120,000 people aged 40-49 were admitted with liver damage of varying degrees since 2010.

Meanwhile, the Royal College of Psychiatrists urges that men over-65 should drink less than a pint daily, while women should consume nothing more than a half-pint.

However, the figures emerge against a backdrop of other numbers – this time from the Office of National Statistics – showing Britain is sobering up. Three in five adults report they drank alcohol in the past week – a slow and steady decline visible over the last eight years.

In 2005, 72 per cent of men and 57 per cent of women in Britain said they had drunk alcohol in the seven days before, compared with 64 per cent and 52 per cent respectively in 2012.

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Source: Mark Hennessy, Irish Times, 20/12/13

Posted by drugsdotie on 12/20 at 04:20 PM in
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