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Beer Medicine Science

Alcohol Causes One In 20 Deaths Worldwide, Says WHO (theguardian.com) 211

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Alcohol is responsible for more than 5% of all deaths worldwide, or around 3 million a year, new figures have revealed. The data, part of a report from the World Health Organization, shows that about 2.3 million of those deaths in 2016 were of men, and that almost 29% of all alcohol-caused deaths were down to injuries -- including traffic accidents and suicide. The report, which comes out every four years, reveals the continued impact of alcohol on public health around the world, and highlights that the young bear the brunt: 13.5% of deaths among people in their 20s are linked to booze, with alcohol responsible for 7.2% of premature deaths overall. It also stresses that harm from drinking is greater among poorer consumers than wealthier ones. While the proportion of deaths worldwide that have been linked to alcohol has fallen to 5.3% since 2012, when the figure was at 5.9%, experts say the findings make for sobering reading.
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Alcohol Causes One In 20 Deaths Worldwide, Says WHO

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  • In other words (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 24, 2018 @06:16AM (#57366590)
    the rate of death attributed to alcohol has been falling since 2012. Sounds like a better trend to me.
  • Good News (Score:5, Funny)

    by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Monday September 24, 2018 @06:24AM (#57366614)

    95% chance you won't die from alcohol.

    The glass may be half empty but the bottle is half full.

    • Re:Good News (Score:4, Insightful)

      by SCVonSteroids ( 2816091 ) on Monday September 24, 2018 @06:57AM (#57366678)

      More-so than 95% really.
      Almost a third of this 5% who do die from it are from accidents or suicide. Meaning alcohol played a part in the death, but was certainly not the underlying cause.
      Alcohol abuse that lead to suicide is a mental problem compounded by the booze. The individual would've found another compound if booze wasn't available.

      • by yarbo ( 626329 )

        You're begging the question quite a bit there.

        Not all drugs significantly impact coordination and judgement. Not all drugs have a significant negative impact on mental health.

        "Results: 21,967 respondents (13.4% weighted) reported lifetime psychedelic use. There were no significant associations
        between lifetime use of any psychedelics, lifetime use of specific psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, mescaline, peyote), or past
        year use of LSD and increased rate of any of the mental health outcomes. Rather, in several

        • I certainly didn't come out and say all drugs are bad. Cmon now.

          While I've never tried the above-mentioned, I have heard of the many possible positive effects of them on people suffering from several mental health conditions. They are well worth being looked into and their stigma isn't warranted in the least in my opinion.

          • by yarbo ( 626329 )
            "The individual would've found another compound if booze wasn't available." That other compound is very unlikely to be as dangerous as alcohol.
  • by shortscruffydave ( 638529 ) on Monday September 24, 2018 @06:28AM (#57366624)
    Alcohol may cause 1 in 20 deaths, but it probably play a part in about 1 in 20 conceptions, so overall its a zero-sum game
  • by chthon ( 580889 ) on Monday September 24, 2018 @06:36AM (#57366640) Journal

    List of causes of death by rate [wikipedia.org]

    I think that there are more pressing causes of death, which might increase the need for a drink.

    Undid some funny moderation, because I think there are a couple of people worldwide who like to use every opportunity to ban alcohol, even though it is not really a leading cause of death worldwide.

    • by LesFerg ( 452838 )

      But is it more deaths than those caused by hippopotamus?

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Oh, right. All we've got to do is cure cancer and heart disease.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      List of causes of death by rate [wikipedia.org]

      I think that there are more pressing causes of death, which might increase the need for a drink.

      Above that, its lying by statistics. It isn't that alcohol is the cause of the fatality, often it's just a contributing factor. I.E. for young people dying in an alcohol related accident, the problem isn't the alcohol, the problem is the society that permits and in many cases encourages drink driving.

      • by Calydor ( 739835 )

        I thought drunk driving was illegal? How does society at large permit and encourage it? Local peer pressure sure, but I wouldn't blame society as a whole.

  • by swb ( 14022 ) on Monday September 24, 2018 @07:28AM (#57366758)

    Let's say for whatever reason, opium and alcohol switch places historically and instead of alcohol being the dominant legal drug, opium derivatives become legal.

    Like alcohol, the dominant forms of opiates that remain legal are low-concentrate varieties, such as smoking opium or low-strength tinctures -- in the same way that beer and wine are popular, although like spirits, morphine or heroin also exist, but are consumed mostly diluted cocktail style. For the most part, opium is sold in regulated stores and always in well-known concentrations by a well-regulated industry.

    Society has recognized for centuries the problems of opium use, but as its deeply ingrained in culture only the US ever tried to ban it during Prohibition which was a complete failure. Alcohol is seen as much worse, and society is presently engaged in a "alcohol crisis" fueled by over-prescription of therapeutic alcohol and black-market alcohol which is tainted.

    Would we more or less be in the same place we are now, kind of turning a blind eye to the dangers of opium -- relying mostly on the culturally ingrained "rules" for to not overdose regularly?

    It seems to me that most people ignore the large-scale problems with alcohol availability and despite cultural acceptance it's probably way more dangerous than we ever consider. Millions of people are alcoholics and millions more are borderline functional alcoholics and there are vast social problems associated with alcohol, like drunk driving, violence, domestic abuse, etc.

    I think there have been attempts to quantify the risks associated with the various varieties of psychoactive substances and almost always alcohol and tobacco come out 1 or 2 with opiates further down the list maybe behind barbiturates, which society mostly has avoided as a long-term crisis or black market drug.

    The latter is kind of interesting considering the popularity of Seconal and Quaaludes in the late 1960s and 1970s -- it's somewhat surprising that with the surge in illciit lab-made fentanyl and other "research chemicals" that there hasn't been a parallel surge in illicit lab-made Quaaludes or Seconal.

    • by Gilgaron ( 575091 ) on Monday September 24, 2018 @08:07AM (#57366850)
      I think your point here illustrates well that some humans will abuse whatever they can get their hands on. Since banning various substances just seems to create black markets and support the funding of the prisons, do you suppose we ought to increase public support for mental health treatment?
    • and hippies. There's multiple and well sourced quotes from Nixon talking about it. And plenty of discussion around how Marijuana policy was used to get rid of Mexican temp workers once the growing season was over. This is why a rich white guy pulled over with some pot goes to drug rehab and a poor black guy jail.
      • by swb ( 14022 )

        Nixon definitely did weaponize drug policy as a tool for dealing with his enemies -- hippies, left-wing types and minorities.

        My problem is that I don't think drug policy really changed all that much when this happened, the only real difference was that post 1960s there were just a LOT more ordinary white people doing drugs, mostly marijuana.

        But before that, drug policy had historically been used to suppress minorities too -- Chinese, Blacks, Mexicans. Sure, Nixon made it worse but it wasn't like it was gre

  • This article is poorly titled. It should probably be, "Alcohol Abuse Causes 1 In 20 Deaths." Just about anything out there has the potential to be misused and abused.
  • so they rolled in the suicide stats if there was a bottle nearby at time of death?

    fishy! junk science! fake news!

  • Since when does alcohol cause suicide?
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Germany will not like the oktoberfest buzzkill!

  • Life is reason for 10 of 10 deaths. Stop life and nobody needs to die anymore.
  • Alcohol is responsible for more than 5% of all deaths worldwide, or around 3 million a year, new figures have revealed

    I think I speak for everyone when I say "WHO cares?".

    Don't worry, I'll see myself out

  • Overpopulation is a leading cause of global warming
  • This was the original submission:

    Alcohol Causes One In 20 Deaths Worldwide-Says who?

  • ..and it's not necessarily having to do with your health. Seriously, the W.H.O. comes off as more of a political activist organization than it does anything else, they just leverage health issues to further their overall agenda. Not interested in anyone telling me how I should live my life.
  • Indirectly. A lot fewer people of both sexes would be able to get laid if it wasnâ(TM)t for alcohol, and not just due to its intoxicating effects, but also due to the social mingling opportunities that alcohol has been enabling for thousands of years.

  • Just in case a friend needs it : Alcoholics Anonymous [aa.org].
  • Now that pot is available legally one way or another in almost every state, this will go down fast.

  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Monday September 24, 2018 @02:33PM (#57369052) Homepage Journal

    Cars kill more people.

    Most deaths from alcohol are caused by cars.

    It's like blaming alcohol for all the deaths caused by tanks. The tank fired the weapons, the amount of alcohol imbibed is only a contributing factor. Or like blaming the need to use lungs to breathe when it's the smoke that's killing you.

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