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Release Date: December 20, 1999
Contact: Thomas Babor, PhD, MPH
(860)
679-2555
babor@nso.uchc.edu
Alcohol Abuse Exacts $250 Billion Health Care Toll
Alcohol abuse costs society an estimated $250 billion per year in health care, public
safety, and social welfare expenditures. Given this enormous impact, it will remain a
major health problem until public understanding improves, according to a team of
researchers who analyzed prevention and treatment programs.
"Many types of programs have improved, but about 5 percent of adults still abuse
alcohol or are alcohol dependent. Another 20 percent misuse alcohol enough to be at risk
of accidents," said lead author Thomas Babor, PhD, MPH, of the University of
Connecticut. "Such problems persist in part because we view them as moral failures or
disease, rather than interactions between alcohol, drinkers, and their environments."
"The health of the population can best be served not by discovery of a miracle
cure but rather by improvement and more efficient allocation of existing services,"
said Babor. "We need to focus on early identification, case management, and organized
systems of care that serve the health needs of the community."
Babor and colleagues from the California Endowment, the University of Washington, and
the University of Kentucky, Lexington, evaluated the effectiveness of alcohol treatment
programs. According to the researchers, simple approaches have yielded great results, yet
seldom are implemented. For example, nearly half of the internists in the United States do
not ask patients how much they drink. Many controlled trials, however, show that five
minutes of physician-delivered advice effectively reduces the quantity and frequency of
patient drinking. The report appears in the November/December issue of the American
Journal of Health Promotion.
In one study, following a brief physician intervention, alcohol consumption by males
who drank heavily declined 35 percent over nine months, compared with a 14 percent decline
among patients who were not cautioned. Brief interventions appeal economically too. For
each dollar invested in them, health care payors could save an estimated $1.40 over two
years, according to one simulated model.
The researchers found that some types of individual treatments, including 12-step
programs and pharmacological agents, have become increasingly available and effective.
Insurance coverage limitations, provider shortages, and perceived stigma of treatment act
as barriers.
"At the population level, alcohol and drug abuse prevention programs often fail
due to lack of interest in them," said Babor. The researchers cite several approaches
that work better, including raising the drinking age, higher taxes on liquor and beer,
fewer hours of sale, advertising restrictions, and societal disapproval of drunk drivers.
In one study involving 17 industrialized nations, an evaluation from 1970 to 1983
showed a 16 percent higher rate of alcohol consumption in countries where broadcast ads
for alcohol were permitted. Those countries suffered a 10 percent higher rate of auto
fatalities.
"History shows that public attitudes toward alcohol use and its availability are
important determinants of long-term trends," said Babor. "Without public support
for reasonable restrictions on its availability, individual-level interventions alone are
unlikely to be effective."
Partial support for the research was provided by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation to the senior author.
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The American Journal of Health Promotion is a bimonthly
peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the field of health promotion. For information about
the journal call (248) 682-0707 or visit the journal's Web site at www.healthpromotionjournal.com.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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