Preventable Deaths From Alcohol Use Increased In Minnesota Last Year
New preliminary data shows that nearly a thousand Minnesotans died from alcohol use last year.
According to the Minnesota Department of Health, the data suggests that factors related to the pandemic may have boosted a decades-long trend of increasing numbers of alcohol-attributable deaths in Minnesota. The number of fully alcohol-attributable death increased by one-third between 2000 and 2010, and more than doubled between 2010 and 2020.
Fully attributable deaths would not have happened if alcohol had not been consumed. This includes both chronic causes, such as alcohol-related liver abuse, and acute causes, such as alcohol poising. In 2020, 992 Minnesotans died from fully alcohol-attributable causes.
“The deaths of so many Minnesotans from alcohol is tragic and preventable,” said Minnesota Commissioner of Health Jan Malcolm. “Sadly, the pandemic has amplified some of the root causes of substance use and substance use disorders, such as social isolation, job loss and lack of access to treatment. In response, we need to strengthen overall opportunities in our communities for connectedness and financial security as well as specific evidence-based community strategies to reduce excessive alcohol use.”
The deaths from alcohol use in 2020 mirrored similar trends to recent years until the number of alcohol-attributable deaths started to accelerate in June of last year. The Minnesota Department of Health believes this mid-year acceleration is in part to factors associated with the COVID-19 pandemic.
“In 2020, we saw that after May, alcohol-related deaths continued to stay elevated and 171 more Minnesotans died in 2020 compared to 2019, which is a larger jump than the trend prior to the pandemic,” said Kari Gloppen, MDH alcohol epidemiologist. Studies show that excessive drinking affects your brain, heart, liver, digestive system and even your immune system. Alcohol is also a carcinogen that has been linked to several types of cancer.”
The data brief, which you can read here, does not include partially alcohol-attributable causes of death for which alcohol was one of several factors contributing to a death. These estimates underestimate the impact of alcohol use on deaths in Minnesota. In addition, alcohol-attributable deaths are only the tip of the iceberg as far as the impact of excessive alcohol use. Excessive drinking is costly, both in human and economic terms not just related to premature death, but also chronic diseases, including cancer, injuries and violence, crime, property damage, and lost productivity.