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Often, clients are shocked when they learn that their drinking habit falls into the "problem or high-risk drinking" and, that they often binge drink. What may seem like a typical night out turns out to be a binge drinking session! (For women, binge drinking is drinking 5 or more units of alcohol in one session, and for men it's 7 or more.) For most people, I think, binge drinking is associated with college drinking. But this is not so.
Unfortunately, most Americans don't know what problem drinking looks like and dismiss their own heavy drinking until something bad happens. The fact is chronic heavy drinking shortens life and lowers the quality of life.
Here are some facts culled from recent findings about drinking in America.
- New England, Pacific coast, West and Midwest are the regions with the highest rates of alcohol consumption and the largest number of problem drinkers.
- Young women on college campuses binge drink more than male students. Between 2005 and 2012 binge drinking rate for women increased by 17.5%. For men it increased by 4.9%.
- Americans are drinking more, but it's not that more people are drinking. Alarmingly, people who drink are drinking more: 56% (some polls say 64%) of Americans report drinking regularly. Between 2005 and 2012 binge drinkers increased from 9% to 18.3%.
- Regular churchgoers (47%) drink compared to 69% of those who don't.
- 30 to 49 year olds drink the most. (So much for the stereotype.)
- More whites (non-Hispanic) (69%) drink than nonwhites (52%).
- More men (69%) drink than women (59%).
- Wealthier and better educated Americans drink more. "8 in 10 upper-income, college grads drink, compared to about half of lower-income Americans."
- Wealthy people drink more regularly but binge less often than their poorer counterparts.
The bottom line is that alcohol causes far greater harm than drugs. By CDC's estimation, between 2006-2010, 88,000 people died annually from complications from alcohol, while 38,329 died from drug overdoses in 2010.
Individually, persistent or chronic problem drinking is associated with depression and anxiety, decline in social and professional functioning (missing work or school, decreased productivity, social isolation, frequent arguing and fighting). Nationally this becomes a $249 billion problem each year in lost productivity and costs to cover treatment and crimes resulting from alcohol. Ultimately we all have to pay.