Alcohol Related Deaths
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Drinking alcohol in an abusive, irresponsible, and excessive
way can result in a not so insignificant number of alcohol related
deaths. Sadly, in spite of the fact that people have known
about the damaging consequences of abusive and hazardous drinking
for many hundreds of years, people throughout the world continue to
experience serious health problems and, in some instances, alcohol
related deaths.
Obvious Alcohol Related
Deaths
There are more than a few apparent alcohol related deaths and
scores of less instantly recognizable alcohol related deaths.
Conceivably the most incontrovertible alcohol related deaths
concern the following: untimely deaths from chronic alcoholism,
terminal alcohol overdose, alcohol-related traffic deaths, loss of
life from severe alcohol withdrawal symptoms, and the lost of life
of children due to severe fetal alcohol syndrome and other fatal
birth defects. Let us be clear. Alcohol related deaths
are the result of abusive drinking, chronic alcohol abuse, and/or
alcoholism. In other words, repetitive and excessive drinking
has consequences and in far too many instances, these outcomes are
associated with a premature loss of life.
Less Obvious Alcohol Related
Deaths
Some less apparent alcohol related deaths happen in the home via
wife battering, child abuse, and homicide; in the workplace via
alcohol-related injuries and accidents and homicides; and in
society in general via homicide and suicide.

| Alcohol Related Deaths. Research
shows that mixing drinking with boating or swimming can result in
alcohol related deaths. Indeed, according to research,
for every 10 teens who drown, four of them will have been drinking
alcohol. |
Alcohol Related Deaths From
Cancer
Alcohol related deaths also arise from diverse forms of cancer
that are directly or indirectly caused by excessive and abusive
drinking alcoholic beverages. Some of the more conventional
types of cancer that are alcohol-related and that generally lead to
death consist of the following:
- Cancer of the larynx
- Rectal cancer
- Cancer of the throat
- Cancer of the stomach
- Colon cancer
- Liver cancer
- Kidney cancer
- Cancer of the esophagus
| According to the research
literature, alcohol is linked with an estimated 5,000 deaths in
people under age 21 each year--more than all the illegal drugs
combined. |
Alcohol Related Deaths From Non-Cancerous
Medical Problems
The following is a list non-cancerous illnesses, medical
conditions health problems that are alcohol-related and that
regularly lead to the loss of life:
- Cardiovascular obstacles such as strokes and heart failure
- Infections
- Cirrhosis of the liver
- Brain damage
- Ulcers from the perforation of the intestines and the
stomach
- Organ and system malfunction
- Pneumonia
- Urinary tract and Kidney infections
- Malnutrition
- Kidney failure
- Diabetes
- Alcohol-induced coma
- Pancreatitis
| About 100,000 alcohol related
deaths a year can be wholly or partially attributed to drinking,
and alcoholism reduces life expectancy by 10 to 12 years. Next to
smoking, it is the most common preventable cause of death in
America. Although studies indicate that adults who drink moderately
(about one drink a day) have a lower mortality rate than their
non-drinking peers, their risk for untimely death increases with
heavier drinking. |
Alcohol Related Deaths:
Conclusion
A review of the medical research literature reveals quite a few
alcohol related deaths from a variety of obvious and some not so
self-evident sources. But one thing is clear: alcohol
related deaths happen because of abusive and hazardous drinking,
chronic alcohol abuse, and/or alcohol dependency.
Some of the more incontrovertible ways in which individuals lose
their lives from excessive and abusive drinking alcohol entail
homicides, suicides, chronic alcohol addiction, fatal alcohol
withdrawal symptoms, traffic deaths, alcohol poisoning, and from
diverse alcohol-related birth defects like fetal alcohol
syndrome.
Other moderately incontrovertible alcohol related deaths occur
from numerous sorts of cancer. Illustrations of less apparent
alcohol related deaths arise from non-cancerous, alcohol-related
physical and mental health problems, medical conditions, and
illnesses such as organ failure, pancreatitis, brain damage,
strokes, alcohol-induced coma, and heart failure.
It looks as if approximately every year medical research is
uncovering another illness or mental and physical condition that is
caused either directly or indirectly from chronic alcoholism.
Unfortunately, several of these alcohol-related medical
challenges and issues have resulted in the unforeseen deaths of
countless numbers of people.
One would suppose that access to this information would
substantially decrease the number of people who become alcoholics.
Unfortunately, the medical and alcohol dependency death statistics
do not corroborate this claim.

| To most people, binge drinking
brings to mind a self-destructive and unrestrained drinking bout
lasting for at least a couple of days during which time the heavily
intoxicated drinker "drops out" by refusing to work, ignoring
responsibilities, wasting money, and engaging in other harmful
behaviors such as violence or risky sex. No matter how binge
drinking is perceived, however, it must be emphasized that alcohol
related deaths can and do result from binge
drinking. |
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| Here's a shocking alcohol
related death statistic. In the United States, roughly 75% of all
deaths among persons between the ages of 10 and 24 years old result
from the following four causes: suicide, homicide, motor-vehicle
accidents, and other unintentional injuries. Results
from the 1999 national Youth Risk Behavior Survey, moreover,
demonstrate that numerous high school students engage in behaviors,
such as alcohol abuse and illicit drug use, that increase their
likelihood of death from these four
causes. |
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