* ALCOHOL USE AND ABUSE [SECOND PART]

PREVALENCE
*

In the United States, 44 percent of adults eighteen years of age and older
are current drinkers, consuming at least twelve drinks in the last year.
Meanwhile, 7.4 percent, or approximately 14 million Americans, experience
alcohol abuse or alcohol dependence. Heavy episodic or binge drinking has
remained at the same approximate level of 16 percent for all adults since
1988, with the highest rate, 32 percent, among young adults ages eighteen to
twenty-five. Over one-half of adults report having a close family member who
has experienced alcoholism.

As few as 5 percent of the heaviest drinkers consume as much as 42 percent
of the alcohol drunk in the United States, and 20 percent of drinkers
account for nearly 90 percent of the alcohol consumed. The bulk of the
alcohol drunk in the United States, therefore, is consumed by a relatively
small population of very heavy drinkers.

Alcohol is also the drug most frequently used by children and adolescents.
In 1999, over half (52%) of eighth graders (14-year-olds) and 80 percent of
twelfth graders (18-year-olds) reported having used alcohol at least once.
More problematic drinking occurs in 15 percent of eighth graders and 31
percent of twelfth graders, who reported binge drinking (consuming five or
more drinks in a row) in the previous two weeks. Of American high school
adolescents, over half (51%) currently drink alcohol. In 1999, one in three
high school students reported heavy episodic drinking of five or more drinks
on at least one occasion during the previous thirty days. The prevalence of
heavy drinking commonly increases through adolescence into early adulthood.
HEALTH OUTCOMES

Alcohol use has health and social consequences for those who drink, for
those around them, and for the nation as a whole. Approximately 100,000
deaths each year are attributed to alcohol use, making it the third leading
cause of preventable mortality in the United States. Worldwide, 750,000
deaths are attributed to alcohol use each year. Alcohol-related deaths occur
from cancer, cirrhosis <http://www.healthline.com/adamcontent/cirrhosis> of
the liver, pancreatitis <http://www.healthline.com/adamcontent/pancreatitis>,
motor-vehicle crashes, falls, drowning,
suicide<http://www.healthline.com/galecontent/suicide-1>,
and homicide. Alcohol affects nearly every system in the body, and
contributes to a range of medical problems, including altered immune system
functioning, bone disease,
hypertension<http://www.healthline.com/adamcontent/hypertension>,
stroke <http://www.healthline.com/adamcontent/stroke>, cardiovascular
disease, reduced cognitive functioning, fetal abnormalities, traumatic
injury <http://www.healthline.com/galecontent/maxillofacial-trauma>,
depression, gastrointestinal disorders, and
cancers<http://www.healthline.com/adamcontent/cancer>of the neck,
head, stomach, pancreas, colon, breast, and prostate. Alcohol
also produces significant social problems, including domestic
violence<http://www.healthline.com/galecontent/domestic-violence>,
child abuse <http://www.healthline.com/galecontent/child-abuse-1>, marital
and family disruption, violent crime, motor-vehicle crashes, worksite
productivity losses, absenteeism, and lowered school achievement. The
estimated cost of alcohol misuse in the United States in 1998 was nearly
$185 billion.

Young people are particularly vulnerable to acute alcohol effects due to
their lower tolerance to alcohol, their lack of experience with drinking,
and drinking patterns that often include heavy episodic drinking in
high-risk situations, such as during driving and sexual encounters. Leading
causes of mortality and morbidity among youths include alcohol-related
motor-vehicle injuries, homicide, and suicide. Alcohol use among young
people is associated with reduced scholastic achievement, increased
delinquency, and the development of psychiatric problems later in life.
Alcohol has also been found to precede other illicit drug use, thereby
serving as a "gateway" to other drug consumption, including marijuana and
cocaine use.

Women and the elderly are also at greater risk for experiencing alcohol harm
because of their lower levels of body water, meaning that smaller amounts of
alcohol result in higher levels of intoxication than in younger men.
Drinking during pregnancy has been linked to higher rates of
miscarriage<http://www.healthline.com/adamcontent/miscarriage>,
stillbirth <http://www.healthline.com/adamcontent/stillbirth>, and premature
births <http://www.healthline.com/galecontent/premature-birth>, and fetal
alcohol syndrome—a set of birth defects caused by maternal consumption of
alcohol during pregnancy. For the elderly, drinking even modest amounts of
alcohol may cause considerable problems due to chronic illness, interactions
with medications, and grief and loneliness from the death of loved ones.

At the same time, moderate to low levels of alcohol consumption have been
linked to a lower risk for heart
disease<http://www.healthline.com/adamcontent/heart-disease>and
stroke. These positive effects appear to be confined primarily,
however,
to middle-aged and older individuals in industrialized countries with high
rates of cardiovascular
diseases<http://www.healthline.com/galecontent/cardiovascular-diseases>.
Individuals and populations must weigh the risks and benefits of drinking to
themselves and others, including such factors as the situations under which
drinking is to take place and the amount likely to be consumed, to determine
the net results of drinking.
SOLUTIONS

The burden of alcohol misuse is measured in a number of ways, including the
prevalence and incidence of deaths, injuries, and illnesses attributed to
alcohol; hospitalization rates; potential years of life lost to alcohol
misuse; and quality of life indicators. Vast resources are expended each
year in the United States to address the health and social problems
resulting from alcohol misuse. Because no single solution can reduce all
alcohol-related harm to individuals and populations, a comprehensive
approach using a range of strategies that address the multiple causes and
dimensions of alcohol problems is needed. These strategies should include
educational approaches—such as public health education and awareness
programs, including school, family, and community-based prevention programs;
environmental approaches—such as controls on the price and availability of
alcohol, minimum age for purchase of alcohol, legislative measures to curb
driving under the influence of alcohol, and restrictions on the promotion,
marketing, and advertising of alcohol; and health care efforts—such as primary
health 
care<http://www.healthline.com/adamcontent/choosing-a-primary-care-provider>screening,
advice by health care providers, preventive services, and
effective treatment using psychological and pharmacological approaches.

For more information about alcohol use among individuals and populations,
its relation to health and social problems, or how to reduce alcohol risk,
contact the following:

   - National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA),
   Scientific Communications Branch, (301) 443–3860, or online at
   http://www.niaaa.nih.gov <http://www.niaaa.nih.gov./>.
   - Substance 
Abuse<http://www.healthline.com/adamcontent/drug-abuse-and-dependence>and
Mental Health Services Administration, National Clearing-house for
   Alcohol and Drug Information,(800) 729–6686, or online at
   http://www.health.org <http://www.health.org./>.
   - National Council on Alcoholism and Drug
Dependence<http://www.healthline.com/adamcontent/chemical-dependence-resources>,
   (800) NCA-CALL, or online at http://www.ncadd.org<http://www.ncadd.org./>.

   - *Healthy People 2010,* Objectives on Substance Abuse, (800)
   336–4797, or online at
http://www.health.gov/healthypeople<http://www.health.gov/healthypeople.>.

   - World Health Organization, Health Communication and Public
   Relations, 41 22/791/2543, or online at http://www.who.ch/.

- CHUDLEY E. WERCH

[FINISHED]

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