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    Alcohol use and burden for 195 countries and territories, 1990-2016: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016

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    BACKGROUND: Alcohol use is a leading risk factor for death and disability, but its overall association with health remains complex given the possible protective effects of moderate alcohol consumption on some conditions. With our comprehensive approach to health accounting within the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2016, we generated improved estimates of alcohol use and alcohol-attributable deaths and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) for 195 locations from 1990 to 2016, for both sexes and for 5-year age groups between the ages of 15 years and 95 years and older. METHODS: Using 694 data sources of individual and population-level alcohol consumption, along with 592 prospective and retrospective studies on the risk of alcohol use, we produced estimates of the prevalence of current drinking, abstention, the distribution of alcohol consumption among current drinkers in standard drinks daily (defined as 10 g of pure ethyl alcohol), and alcohol-attributable deaths and DALYs. We made several methodological improvements compared with previous estimates: first, we adjusted alcohol sales estimates to take into account tourist and unrecorded consumption; second, we did a new meta-analysis of relative risks for 23 health outcomes associated with alcohol use; and third, we developed a new method to quantify the level of alcohol consumption that minimises the overall risk to individual health. FINDINGS: Globally, alcohol use was the seventh leading risk factor for both deaths and DALYs in 2016, accounting for 2ยท2% (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 1ยท5โ€“3ยท0) of age-standardised female deaths and 6ยท8% (5ยท8โ€“8ยท0) of age-standardised male deaths. Among the population aged 15โ€“49 years, alcohol use was the leading risk factor globally in 2016, with 3ยท8% (95% UI 3ยท2โ€“4ยท3) of female deaths and 12ยท2% (10ยท8โ€“13ยท6) of male deaths attributable to alcohol use. For the population aged 15โ€“49 years, female attributable DALYs were 2ยท3% (95% UI 2ยท0โ€“2ยท6) and male attributable DALYs were 8ยท9% (7ยท8โ€“9ยท9). The three leading causes of attributable deaths in this age group were tuberculosis (1ยท4% [95% UI 1ยท0โ€“1ยท7] of total deaths), road injuries (1ยท2% [0ยท7โ€“1ยท9]), and self-harm (1ยท1% [0ยท6โ€“1ยท5]). For populations aged 50 years and older, cancers accounted for a large proportion of total alcohol-attributable deaths in 2016, constituting 27ยท1% (95% UI 21ยท2โ€“33ยท3) of total alcohol-attributable female deaths and 18ยท9% (15ยท3โ€“22ยท6) of male deaths. The level of alcohol consumption that minimised harm across health outcomes was zero (95% UI 0ยท0โ€“0ยท8) standard drinks per week. INTERPRETATION: Alcohol use is a leading risk factor for global disease burden and causes substantial health loss. We found that the risk of all-cause mortality, and of cancers specifically, rises with increasing levels of consumption, and the level of consumption that minimises health loss is zero. These results suggest that alcohol control policies might need to be revised worldwide, refocusing on efforts to lower overall population-level consumption. FUNDING: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
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