Alcohol Blamed For 2m A&E Patients In UK, According To Research

Drinking Ourselves To Death? Alcohol Blamed For 2m A&E Patients

Alcohol-related injury and illness accounts for 14 per cent of all accident and emergency hospital attendance, research has found.

More than one in 10 people attend A&E wards with an alcohol-related injury while 3% of patients attend due to alcohol-related illness, a study suggests.

The authors of the report, which is published online in Emergency Medicine Journal, suggest the numbers equate to nearly 2 million alcohol-related visits to emergency care departments in England and Wales every year.

More than one in 10 A&E visits are alcohol-related

Researchers found that one third of patients, or 640,000, who attended A and E units required admission to hospital.

They studied 774 patients seeking emergency care at Bristol Royal Infirmary over a four week period in June 2009.

"Harmful and hazardous alcohol use is a major problem," the authors write.

"If these figures are extrapolated, the number of patients presenting with alcohol-related injury is in excess of 7,000 attendances to the Bristol Royal Infirmary annually, or nearly 2m patients every year in England and Wales."

Alcohol Concern director of campaigns Emily Robinson said: "Alcohol-related hospital admissions remain extremely high, having doubled over a decade.

"This study provides a worrying insight into the actual level of the burden put on to emergency medical services by those who have been drinking and those who suffer the results of alcohol-induced violence, and it estimates nearly 2 million attendances at A&E per year across England and Wales could be due to alcohol.

"While the government has shown a will to tackle these problems in its new alcohol strategy, it must now make sure that the policies suggested, such as dedicated alcohol liaison nurses in A&E, are backed by sufficient resources to make a real difference."

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