More than 1,000 years of life lost to alcohol-related deaths in Harrow in 2020

More than 1,000 years of life were lost due to alcohol-related deaths in Harrow in 2020, new figures suggest.
EMBARGOED TO 0505 WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 7 File photo dated 01/12/06 of a man drinking a pint of beer. For the first time in Europe, scientists have discovered the ancestor of the yeast species necessary for the production of lager beer. Issue date: Wednesday December 7, 2022.EMBARGOED TO 0505 WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 7 File photo dated 01/12/06 of a man drinking a pint of beer. For the first time in Europe, scientists have discovered the ancestor of the yeast species necessary for the production of lager beer. Issue date: Wednesday December 7, 2022.
EMBARGOED TO 0505 WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 7 File photo dated 01/12/06 of a man drinking a pint of beer. For the first time in Europe, scientists have discovered the ancestor of the yeast species necessary for the production of lager beer. Issue date: Wednesday December 7, 2022.

More than 1,000 years of life were lost due to alcohol-related deaths in Harrow in 2020, new figures suggest.

It comes after the number of people who died from excessive alcohol consumption across England soared during the coronavirus pandemic.

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Alcohol awareness charity Drinkaware said the statistics are "devastating" and urged the Government to create a nationwide alcohol strategy to reduce the damage caused.

Office for Health and Improvement Disparities figures show premature deaths from alcohol-related conditions led to a potential 1,237 years of life being lost in Harrow in 2020 – though this was down from 1,280 in 2019.

Of these, 816 (66%) were as a result of alcohol-related deaths among men, and 421 (34%) among women.

Across England, 293,980 years of life were lost due to alcohol-related conditions in males in 2020.

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This fell to 138,060 years among females, though both are at their highest level since records began in 2016.

Potential years of life lost are calculated by multiplying the total number of alcohol-related deaths occurring at each age by the number of remaining years left to live, according to life expectancy estimates.

Alcohol-related deaths include those specifically caused by alcohol, such as alcoholic liver disease, and diseases made more likely by extensive alcohol consumption, including heart disease or various types of cancer.

Karen Tyrell, chief executive of Drinkaware, said: "These statistics are absolutely devastating, each number masking an individual family tragedy.

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"We also know that the heaviest drinkers drank more during the pandemic, and warning signs were missed as people saw each other less and were less able to access support.

"This created a perfect storm and we are now seeing the consequences."

Separate Office for National Statistics figures show that deaths as a direct result of alcohol consumption rose during the pandemic.

Across England, there were 7,600 alcohol-specific deaths in 2021 – the highest number since records began in 2001 and a 30% increase from 2019, the last full year before the pandemic.

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In London, 793 people died from alcohol-specific causes – up from 579 in 2019 and also a record.

It meant 10.2 per 100,000 people in the region died due to alcohol in 2021.

The ONS said: "Alcohol-specific deaths have risen sharply since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, with alcoholic liver disease the leading cause of these deaths.

"This rise is likely to be the result of increased alcohol consumption during the pandemic.

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"Research has suggested that people who were already drinking at higher levels before the pandemic were the most likely to have increased their alcohol consumption during this period."

Drinkaware is now urging Health Secretary Steve Barclay to come together with experts to create a new coordinated UK-wide alcohol strategy.

The Department for Health and Social care said it is taking action to "support those most at risk, with a strong programme under way to address alcohol harms in the UK which has already helped tens of thousands of people".

A spokesperson said it has invested £93 million to rebuild drug and alcohol misuse treatment and services in England and increase the availability of inpatient detoxification beds.