Reuters Health Information: Binge drinking most likely to kill middle-aged Americans, CDC says
Binge drinking most likely to kill middle-aged Americans, CDC says
Last Updated: 2015-01-06
By David Beasley
ATLANTA (Reuters) - It's not college students or teenagers
but rather middle-aged Americans who are most likely to die from
drinking too much alcohol too quickly, according to a study
released by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
on Tuesday.
An average of six people die each day in the United States
from alcohol poisoning or excessively high levels of alcohol in
the blood, which is typically caused by binge drinking, the
federal study found.
Three out of four of those who died were between the ages of
35 and 64, the study found, countering the popular perception
that young people are more likely than their elders to die from
binge drinking.
Only 5.1% of the deaths were drinkers between the ages of 15
and 24, the study found.
"Contrary to conventional wisdom, there is a lot of binge
drinking going on by people who are post college-age," the
study's co-author, Robert Brewer, told reporters. "We were
surprised by these findings."
The CDC defines binge drinking as consuming four or more
drinks for women or five or more drinks for men on a single
occasion.
Fewer than a third of the people who died of alcohol
poisoning were considered alcoholics, the study found.
Analyzing death certificate data from 2010 through 2012,
researchers found that an average of 2,200 people, more than
half of them white males, died from alcohol poisoning each year.
State death rates ranged from a low of 5.3 deaths per
million residents in Alabama to a high of 46.5 deaths per
million residents in Alaska. The regions with the highest death
rates were the Great Plains, the West and New England.
"Living in geographically isolated rural areas might
increase the likelihood that a person with alcohol poisoning
will not be found before death or that timely emergency medical
services will not be available," the researchers wrote.
SOURCE: http://1.usa.gov/1Kj4fhg,
MMWR 2015.
|