Home > Alcohol in Ireland: consumption, harm, cost and policy response.

Mongan, Deirdre ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3616-4253 and Long, Jean (2016) Alcohol in Ireland: consumption, harm, cost and policy response. Dublin: Health Research Board.

[img]
Preview
PDF (Alcohol in Ireland: consumption, harm, cost and policy response)
1MB
[img]
Preview
PDF (Overview of alcohol consumption, alcohol-related harm and alcohol policy in Ireland - Infographics) - Supplemental Material
45kB

Key points among the findings

Alcohol –how much and what we drink
• In 2014 Irish drinkers consumed 11 litres of pure alcohol each. This is equal to 29 litres of vodka, 116 bottles of wine or 445 pints of beer.
• Current per capita consumption is 21% higher than the Department of Health steering group’s target which sets out to reduce per capita consumption, from 11.0 litres of pure alcohol per person to 9.1 litres.
• In 2012 Ireland had the fourth highest alcohol consumption level among 36 OECD countries after Estonia, France and Lithuania.
• It is not just what Irish people drink, but the way they drink that causes harm. In 2013 the HRB Alcohol Diary survey showed that more than 50% of Irish drinkers consume alcohol in a harmful manner – too much alcohol in one sitting and more than the recommended number of standard drinks in a week.

Alcohol – the impact on our health
• The number of people discharged from hospital whose condition was totally attributable to alcohol rose by 82% between 1995 and 2013, from 9,420 to 17,120. Males accounted for 72% of these discharges and females 28%.
• There has also been a steady increase in the mean length of stay (LOS) for hospital discharges, from 6.0 days in 1995 to 10.1 days in 2013, which suggests that patients with alcohol-related diagnoses are becoming more complex in terms of their illness.
• The rate of alcoholic liver disease discharges grew threefold between 1995 and 2013. The highest rate of increase was observed among 15–34 year-olds, albeit from a low rate.
• The number of people discharged whose condition was partially attributed to alcohol increased from 52,491 in 2007 to 57,110 in 2011. This is approximately three times the number of discharges totally attributable to alcohol.
• Between 2001 and 2010, one in ten breast cancer cases were attributable to alcohol.
• Three people died each day in 2013 as a result of drinking alcohol.
• In 2014, one- in-three self-harm presentations were alcohol-related.
• An estimated 167,170 people suffered an alcohol-related assault.
• A total of 7,549 cases entered treatment in 2013 with alcohol as their main problem drug. These cases were predominantly male and median age was 39-40 years. This is a decrease of just over 12% since 2011. This decrease could reflect a true decrease in the number of cases, reduced levels of participation or under-reporting or a combination of these factors.

Alcohol – impact on the economy and tax payer
• In 2013, alcohol-related discharges accounted for 160,211 bed days in public hospitals, that is 3.6% of all bed days that year; compared to 56,264 bed days or 1.7% of the total number of bed days in 1995.
• €1.5 billion is the cost to the tax-payer for alcohol-related discharges from hospital. That is equal to €1 for every €10 spent on public health in 2012. This excludes the cost of emergency cases, GP visits, psychiatric admissions and alcohol treatment services.
• An estimated 5,315 people on the Live Register in November 2013 had lost their job due to alcohol use.
• The estimated cost of alcohol-related absenteeism was €41,290,805 in 2013.


Item Type
Report
Publication Type
Irish-related, International, Report
Drug Type
Alcohol
Intervention Type
General / Comprehensive, Drug therapy, Treatment method, Prevention, Harm reduction, Rehabilitation/Recovery, Screening / Assessment, Policy
Date
June 2016
Pages
96 p.
Publisher
Health Research Board
Place of Publication
Dublin
EndNote

Repository Staff Only: item control page