Yesterday saw the publication of the latest statistics for alcohol-specific deaths in the UK. These cover deaths which are directly attributed to alcohol consumption (mainly liver disease), which constitute around a third of all alcohol-related deaths.
Following the drug-related death figures of August they bring more sad and worrying news. 2021 saw 9,641 people die from alcohol-specific causes which constitutes the highest number on record and an increase of 7.4% from the year before.
Most worryingly the current figures are a huge 27.4% higher than 2019, the last year before the Covid-19 pandemic hit. The Office for National Statistics statistician commented “The rise is likely to be the result of increased alcohol consumption during the pandemic. Research has suggested that people who were already drinking at higher levels before the pandemic were the most likely to have increased their alcohol consumption during this period.”
Well established patterns in the data have continued with twice the amount of men dying as women and deaths correlating strongly with poverty within the UK.
Collective Voice Director Oliver Standing said: “The 2021 figures should worry us all, confirming as they do the continued increase in alcohol-specific deaths and a sharp increase on account of the Covid-19 pandemic. The harmful effects of isolation and the strain on our mental health and wellbeing affected us all during lockdowns, and for those struggling with alcohol use it has had a huge detrimental effect on mental and physical health. Treatment and recovery services will continue to work hard to meet the needs of people using alcohol, but we urge government to also play its part and raise its ambitions on alcohol use to the standards it has set itself on drug use.”
Related Content
Collective Voice calls on Government to prioritise reducing harm from drugs
Every one of these deaths is a tragedy – and we should be doing more as a society to prevent them. ONS 2024 data on
Collective Voice responds to the Government’s consultation on the Autumn Budget
The Government has set out admirable ideas and principles in the 10-year health plan and the response to the Independent Sentencing Review, as well as
The Women’s Treatment Working Group launches its Womanifesto
Through dedicated spaces, support for mothers, and co-designed pathways, we can build a system that is safe, inclusive, and effective for all women. Read the