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Binge Drinking: Cameron To Tackle 'Scandalous' Alcohol Abuse

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PA/Huffington Post UK   First Posted: 15/02/2012 06:19 Updated: 15/02/2012 07:55

David Cameron is vowing to take on the "scandal" of public drunkenness and alcohol abuse that costs the NHS £2.7 bn a year.

On a visit to a hospital, the prime minister will insist that bars, supermarkets and the drinks industry must help ensure responsible drinking becomes more than "just a slogan".

He will hit out at the "reckless" behaviour of an "irresponsible" minority and cite figures suggesting the alcohol-related costs to society as a whole are between £17 and £22bn a year.

Cameron will call for "innovative" solutions and raise the prospect of "drunk tanks", which are widely used in Europe and the US.
Downing Street said there were 200,000 hospital admissions in 2010/11 with alcohol as the primary factor.

Meeting doctors, nurses, paramedics and police in the North East today, Cameron will say: "Every night, in town centres, hospitals and police stations across the country, people have to cope with the consequences of alcohol abuse, and the problem is getting worse.

"Over the last decade we've seen a frightening growth in the number of people - many under-age - who think it's acceptable for people to get drunk in public in ways that wreck lives, spread fear and increase crime.

"This is one of the scandals of our society and I am determined to deal with it.

"As figures today show the NHS is having to pick up an ever-growing bill - £2.7bn a year, including £1bn on accident and emergency services alone. That's money we have to spend because of the reckless behaviour of an irresponsible minority."

Cameron will say the Government will set out how it intends to help emergency services "rise to the challenge" in a forthcoming Alcohol Strategy.

"Whether it's the police officers in A&E that have been deployed in some hospitals, the booze buses in Soho and Norwich, or the drunk tanks used abroad, we need innovative solutions to confront the rising tide of unacceptable behaviour," he will go on.

"This isn't just about more rules and regulation. It's about responsibility and a sense of respect for others.

"This is an area where the drinks industry, supermarkets, pubs and clubs need to work with government so that responsible drinking becomes a reality and not just a slogan."

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David Cameron is vowing to take on the "scandal" of public drunkenness and alcohol abuse that costs the NHS £2.7 bn a year. On a visit to a hospital, the prime minister will insist that bars, supe...
David Cameron is vowing to take on the "scandal" of public drunkenness and alcohol abuse that costs the NHS £2.7 bn a year. On a visit to a hospital, the prime minister will insist that bars, supe...
 
 
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00:00 on 16/02/2012
his in a catch 22 here because drinkers, smokers and car drivers keep the country running with the taxes mounted on them, Don"t do a Labour and spend more than comes in because i think if you check the figures, your need for there taxes are greater than what it costs you in outgoings. A good place to start would the both houses they have there fair share of heavy drinkers, and all at low rates of purchase sponsored by us the good old tax payer. I don"t like the drunken behaviour of the british public mostly girls, but thats what the country has turned into the politicians have no respect for what they have done to the country so why should the public
23:32 on 15/02/2012
This idea is just kind of excuse to be able ''taxing the poor to pay for the poor.’’ It is a completely nonsense to suggest that, an innocent people have to pay for them. If some people behaved disgracefully, then, they must take a responsibility for their actions.
20:48 on 15/02/2012
We already have a raft of legislation in place to tackle the problem in the form of antisocial and public disturbance laws. What we do need is a leader to back the police force to carry out their policing of our city centres properly. Cameron needs to grow a pair and tell judges to deal with offenders sternly, tell the police commissioners to get out of their office chairs and down on the streets every Friday and Saturday night backing their officers on the front line.
It should no longer accepted that police officers are verbally abused in the streets charge the offenders, lock them up for the night and in front of a magistrate next morning, 100 hours of community work to be done on Saturday and Sunday really annoys them, promise I hear them moaning down at my local gym. Antisocial behaviour dealt with in the same way and any vandalism should be paid for either all at once or in instalments and part of the community service spent putting it right. Repeat offenders should be dealt with more severely eventfully locking the worst up.
Put in a nut shell deal with this minority, invest and empower our police at street level and don’t punish every one for the crimes of a few. Cameron cut the political posturing and get on with the job you have with the adequate laws you have in place.
20:12 on 15/02/2012
Once an advisor of Cameron shows him the figures of revenue sales that booze brings in, he'll turn a blind eye...
19:40 on 15/02/2012
Was this alcohol problem like it is before they changed the licensing hours, which all the MP's seem to have allowed to be passed? Why not bring back 6.00 to 10.30 opening hours and close the vertical drinking establishments.
19:46 on 15/02/2012
Was this alcohol problem like it before they changed the licensing hours, which all the MP's seem to have allowed to be passed? Why not bring back 6.00 to 10.30pm opening hours and close the vertical drinking establishm­ents and the bars in the House of Commons as well, if it is such a problem, let them show a good example. Don't get me wrong I like a drink as well, but I will have with dinner at home.
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17:20 on 15/02/2012
I wonder,where the extra money this raises will go,,????????
21:27 on 15/02/2012
MP's expenses?
17:06 on 15/02/2012
Alcohol abuse is so widespread that we fail to see that it is a drug, although it is a legal one.
I recently watched a really interesting video on the natural human tendency to go for mind-altering substances. One of the speaker's point of view is that, for all of these substances we should evaluate the positive (creativity, imagination, wellbeing etc) vs negative consequences that they entail for the individual. He could not really see much positive consequence of alcohol consumption... You can check the video here:
http://www.iai.tv/video/drug-culture
15:44 on 15/02/2012
As a Pub Landlord of a community Pub I do not suffer from pre loaded youngsters or dare I say older should be wiser patrons. However, I do believe in responsible alcohol retailing. Community Pubs are where the majority, by that I mean nearly everyone drinks sensibly. Young with the old in an environment of collegial behavioral learning. Not couped up in a bus shelter or mates flat guzzliung below cost of duty alcohol sold without accountability by the Supermarkets? Let us also look how the HMRC look at Pubs as a generous collector of VAT, yet allow massive discounts on alcohol by supermarkets which cheat the HMRC of anywhere near equal revenue?

So may I suggest that the Government start at the seat of the fire and extinguish the base from where the destructive confligration of public disorder erupts SUPERMARKETS' TOTAL DISRESPECT OF THE PEOPLE OF THIS COUNTRY
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14:52 on 15/02/2012
Increase the fine to £200 and then on 2nd offence take to court and hammer them.This will give them a criminal record and will affect their job prospects.Do this several times and it will send the message out that it will not be tolerated.Most of the "Binge " drinkers I have encountered have good,responsible jobs but go over the top at weekends. Firm action is required.Put a tax on city centre pubs to pay for extra policing and the clean up afterwards.
lastpost
see biography
14:33 on 15/02/2012
"Binge Drinking: Cameron To Tackle 'Scandalous' Alcohol Abuse"
Obviously this necessitates fact finding missions. Where MPs roam the world first class, seeking out solutions. Such as removing all alcohol from outlets before the public can get it. As an initial experiment, travelling to North America and attempting to drink Canada dry.
14:29 on 15/02/2012
Another opportunity to tax the public
14:19 on 15/02/2012
He can do more to correct this is issue than anyone: Simply by resigning......
13:51 on 15/02/2012
There will need to be separate, posh ones, for Bullington Boys of course with breakfast in the morning.
13:28 on 15/02/2012
It is already a criminal offence to be drunk in public - simply increase the fixed fine to £500 and get the police to enforce it - if the police simply target an area with lots of drunks and arrest the lot and the fines are paid over to the police to cover the costs of enforcement then the problem will soon disappear - those fined will desist in future and those that don't wil be so broke paying fines they woun't be able to afford to get drunk - full enforcement is the key
15:24 on 15/02/2012
In a perfect world yes ronnie/
Many now being given a heavy fine, merely ask the judge
to give them time in jail instead.
As they are not working some do not care.
I have seen this several times recently.
We the taxpayer lose out then.
There is no single answer, to this problem.
wes
16:25 on 15/02/2012
waskirk - Helsinki Airport was built by the drunks of Finland- they got 90 days of backbreaking work mixing cement by hand ,. we can do the same - those who can't don't or won't pay the fines get " community service " of some sort like that - plenty of canals need digging out , ditches to be cleared etc .

I remember many years ago in Ireland seeing a Youth Detention Centre near the sea - every day the immates did backbreaking work in all weathers digging holes in the sand and every day the tide filled them in again for them to dig up again - it was backbreaking work - nobody wanted a second term of it .

We have plenty of old disused airfields etc . and plenty of farm manure - so have a big pile of it and put them to shovelling it from one side of a field to the other back and forth for 90 days .

The fact is the State can enforce the law if it chooses to - we don't need new laws - just enforce the existing .

It may not stop all but it will deter many - I don't see why the sensible drinkers should be penalised for those that chose not to obey the law - you may as well say stick points on everyone's licence because some speed - time to be a lot more judgemental and a lot less understanding .
15:55 on 15/02/2012
ronnieince
Well said, they wont go after the same minority that cause all the trouble in the town centres every weekend because instead they want to lump everybody who has a drink together and hit the whole lot with a treasury alcohol tax maximisation con. That raises taxes from all drinkers but lets drunk and disordely yobs off to do it again so the treasury can up tax on everyones drink again.
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Norman Mitchison
13:14 on 15/02/2012
Firstly, put drunk tanks in Parliament for the subsidised alcohol bingers, and then get on and run the Country.