Recent evidence suggests there may be no safe level of alcohol use as even low levels are associated with increased risk for harm. However, the magnitude of the population-level health burden from lower levels of alcohol use is poorly understood. The objective was to estimate the distribution of alcohol-attributable healthcare encounters (emergency department (ED) visits and hospitalizations) across the population of alcohol users aged 15+ in Ontario, Canada. Using the International Model of Alcohol Harms and Policies (InterMAHP) tool, wholly and partially alcohol-attributable healthcare encounters were estimated across alcohol users: (1) former (no past-year use); (2) low volume (≤67.3 g ethanol/week); (3) medium volume (>67.3-134.5 g ethanol/week for women and >67.3-201.8 g ethanol/week for men); and (4) high volume (>134.5 g ethanol/week for women and >201.8 g ethanol/week for men). The alcohol-attributable healthcare burden was distributed across the population of alcohol users. A small population of high volume users (23% of men, 13% of women) were estimated to have contributed to the greatest proportion of alcohol-attributable healthcare encounters, particularly among men (men: 65% of ED visits and 71% of hospitalizations, women: 49% of ED visits and 50% of hospitalizations). The 71% of women low and medium volumes users were estimated to have contributed to a substantial proportion of alcohol-attributable healthcare encounters (47% of ED visits and 34% of hospitalizations). Findings provide support for universal alcohol policies (i.e., delivered to the entire population) for reducing population-level alcohol-attributable harm in addition to targeted policies for high-risk users.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10491731 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pmedr.2023.102388 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!