1 / 50

Alcohol in Ireland. Major health burden. Major economic burden. Major opportunity.

Alcohol in Ireland. Major health burden. Major economic burden. Major opportunity. Prof Frank Murray Registrar RCPI Consultant Gastroenterologist/ Hepatologist , Beaumont Hospital/RCSI, Dublin 9. Policies that reduce the availability of alcohol though:. Price increases or

jon
Download Presentation

Alcohol in Ireland. Major health burden. Major economic burden. Major opportunity.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Alcohol in Ireland.Major health burden.Major economic burden.Major opportunity. Prof Frank Murray Registrar RCPI Consultant Gastroenterologist/Hepatologist, Beaumont Hospital/RCSI, Dublin 9

  2. Policies that reduce the availability of alcohol though: Price increases or Reducing outlets and hours of sale Have been shown to be effective

  3. Europe is the heaviest drinking region in the world • Alcohol is the main cause of liver disease in Europe • The prevalence of alcoholic liver disease is rising in Ireland

  4. Problems addressing the alcohol problem in Ireland!!!! • Drinking alcohol can be harmless, in contrast to cigarettes • Alcohol is strongly rooted in our society • The alcohol industries receive the majority of their turnover in UK from harmful and hazardous drinkers

  5. Alcohol in Europe • Europe is the highest drinking region in the world • 200,000 deaths per year • Cost €125 billion per year. 1.3% of GDP • Third commonest cause of premature death and disability • Main cause of liver disease and death

  6. DALY (Disability adjusted life year) • The sum of the life years lost due to premature death or years lived in disability

  7. Alcohol cause huge health problems • WHO: • 4% of global mortality • 5% of global DALY • Europe worse • 7% mortality • 12% of DALY

  8. Alcohol cause huge health problems • Worse in males: 17% of DALYs( vs 4%) • Worst in young males • Alcohol cause 35% of deaths aged 35-50

  9. Alcohol responsibility for many youth deaths • 25% of male • 10% of female

  10. Major disease burdens attributable to alcohol • Cirrhosis • Cancer • Diabetes Mellitus • Neuropsychiatric • Injuries • BP • CVA/stroke • Cardiomyopathy • Cancer • ENT. • Most of GI tract, breast, liver.

  11. Main cause of alcohol DALY • Liver disease • 75% men • 85% women

  12. There is a direct correlation between amount of alcohol consumed and cirrhosis mortality

  13. CIRRHOSIS AND PORTAL HYPERTENSION Cirrhosis and Portal Hypertension

  14. Decompensation in cirrhosis Shortens Survival SURVIVAL TIMES IN CIRRHOSIS 100 80 Median survival ~ 9 years All patients with cirrhosis 60 Probability of survival 40 20 Decompensated cirrhosis Median survival ~ 1.6 years 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 Months Gines et. al., Hepatology 1987;7:122

  15. Mortality due to cirrhosis in Ireland

  16. There is a big human cost here • Ill and dying patients • Often young • Often little opportunity to change • Families

  17. Does not end there • Absenteeism • Loss of professional performance • Domestic violence • Unhappiness

  18. 3 main types of alcohol misuse • Hazardous • Harmful • Dependent drinking.

  19. Hazardous drinking • Drinks over the recommended weekly limit of alcohol • 21/17 units for men and • 14/11 units for women. • It is also possible to drink hazardously by binge drinking, even if within weekly limit.

  20. Harmful drinking • Drinks more than the recommended weekly maximum amount of alcohol and experiences health problems that are directly related to alcohol. • Cirrhosis  • depression • an alcohol-related accident, such as a head injury • acute pancreatitis (inflammation of the pancreas) • high blood pressure • some types of cancer • heart disease

  21. Dependent drinking • Both physically and psychologically addictive • Become dependent on it • Feels unable to function without alcohol • Consumption of alcohol becomes an important, or sometimes the most important, factor in their life • Can experience withdrawal symptoms (both physical and psychological) if they suddenly stop drinking alcohol.

  22. Binge drinking • 4 (female) • 5 (male) • units in 2h • or • 8 (male) • 6 (female) • units in 24 hours • Rapidly increasing in prevalance

  23. So most alcohol consumption is mostly drunk safely?….. • 75% of alcohol consumed in UK is by hazardous and harmful drinkers in the UK

  24. Absolute risk of death from alcohol-related disease

  25. Adult alcohol consumption

  26. Heavy episodic drinking of at least 60g of pure alcohol in last 7 days (women)

  27. Irish consumption • 11.9 litres of alcohol per adult (>15y) in 2010 • Over half Irish drinkers have a harmful drinking pattern • Much more affordable

  28. Irish costs of alcohol • €3.7 billion • Healthcare €1.2 billion (8% of total) • Approx 2,000 hospital beds per night • 7% of GP costs • 30% of Emergency Department costs

  29. Fundamental problem in Ireland • Too much alcohol • Binge drinking • Availability • Number of outlets • Opening hours

  30. Availability • Off-licences • Convenience store • Supermarkets • Petrol stations • Pubs • Hotels • Restaurants

  31. Supermarkets • Promotions • Special offers • Packaging in larger units • Not quarantined, all over the shop

  32. Concerts

  33. Sports sponsorship

  34. Under-age drinking

  35. Marketing towards young people

  36. Options • Do nothing • Do “something” • Take thought-through series of steps. Leads to immediate health social and political gains

  37. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses.Proven policies. • Policies regulating the environment in which alcohol is marketed (particularly its price and availability) are effective in reducing alcohol-related harm. • Making alcohol more expensive and less available, and banning alcohol advertising, are highly cost-effective strategies to reduce harm.

  38. Key messages A substantive evidence base of systematic reviews and meta-analyses inform alcohol policy

  39. Making alcohol more expensive and less available are highly cost-effective strategies to reduce harm

  40. Banning of alcohol advertising • Drink-driving countermeasures • Individually-directed interventions to drinkers already at risk are also cost-effective approaches

  41. School-based education does not reduce harm, but public information and education programmes can increase attention to alcohol on public and political agendas

  42. If more stringent alcohol policies are not put into place, global alcohol-related harm is likely to continue to increase

  43. Actions • Reduce number of outlets dramatically • Increase cost-minimum unit pricing • Expand and enforce legislation re alcohol consumption in public and public order offences • All of proven international proven benefit

  44. Successful legislated constructive social changes in Ireland • Smoking ban • Reduction in alcohol driving limit • Cycling helmets

  45. RCPI alcohol group • RCPI established a national policy group to address the health and social burden of alcohol in Ireland. • The policy group brings together experts from a wide range of medical specialist bodies to speak with one voice on the issue of alcohol, to support • Propose practical solutions backed up by a robust, international evidence base • Focused on reducing the harm caused by alcohol to health and society.

  46. Policies that reduce the availability of alcohol though: Price increases and Reducing outlets and hours of sale Have been shown to be effective

More Related