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Mortality alcohol-related causes

Adverse consequences of drinking include a variety of social, legal, medical, and psychiatric problems (Babor et al. 1987, 2003). Alcohol is among the top four causes of mortality in 1988, 107,800 deaths, or about 5% of all deaths in the United States, were attributed to alcohol-related causes (Stinson and DeBakey 1992). Approximately 17% of alcohol-related deaths were directly attributable to alcohol, 38% resulted from diseases indirecdy attributable to alcohol, and 45% were attributable to alcohol-related traumatic injury (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 1994). Alcohol-related mortality declined during the latter part of the twentieth century. For example, the age-adjusted mortality rate from liver cirrhosis in 1993 (7.9 deaths per 100,000 persons) was just over half the rate in 1970 (14.6 deaths per 100,000) (Saadat-mand et al. 1997), and the proportion of automobile fatalities that was related to the use of alcohol fell to a two-decade low of 33.6% in 1993 (Lane et al. 1997). [Pg.4]

Sasaki, S. (2000). Alcohol and its relation to all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. Acta Cardiol., 55, 151-156. [Pg.589]

There is no question that alcohol abuse contributes significantly to liver-related morbidity and mortality in the United States. Long-term alcohol use is the leading cause of illness and death from liver disease. There are three phases of alcohol-induced liver damage, alcoholic fatty liver, which is usually reversible with abstinence alcoholic hepatitis or inflammation and alcoholic cirrhosis or scarring of the liver. Patients with both alcoholic cirrhosis and hepatitis have a death rate of more than 60% over a 4-year period. The prognosis is bleaker than the outlook for many types of cancers. As many as 900 000 people in the United States suffer from cirrhosis and some 26 000 of these die each year. The risk for liver disease is related to how much a person drinks the risk is low at levels of alcohol consumption but steeply increases with higher levels of consumption. Because effects of alcohol are dose-related and because of the steepness at which the adverse effects are... [Pg.63]

Keil U, Chambless LE, Doling A, Filipiak B, and Stieber J, The relation of alcohol intake to coronary heart disease and all-cause mortality in a beer-drinking population. Epidemiology, Mar 1997 8(2) 150-156. [Pg.20]


See other pages where Mortality alcohol-related causes is mentioned: [Pg.785]    [Pg.1010]    [Pg.316]    [Pg.678]    [Pg.1360]    [Pg.542]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.267]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 ]




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