ByAlessio Dell’Anna&Damaso Jaivenois
Published on
•Updated
Alcohol is behind 31% of deaths from injury and violence in Europe, according to a new report report by the World Health Organization (WHO).
The organization says the continent drinks more than any other region in the world, with a human cost amounting to 145,000 people
The number one cause of death is not an accidental one: self-harm is the biggest killer, leading to 44,000 alcohol-related fatal injuries in 2019 alone, with 83% of cases being among men.
Road accidents fueled by alcohol are next, with 24,000 deaths, followed by alcohol-related falls, which took 20,000 lives.
In general, people aged 35 to 39 are the most vulnerable, while, gender-wise, prevalence is higher among men (36.5%) than women (19.4%).
“Men account for most alcohol-attributable injury deaths because they drink more frequently, consume larger quantities and are more likely to have alcohol use disorder,” says the organization.
What are the most affected countries in Europe?
Although drinking levels have been falling since the early 2000s, the WHO says that there are still significant differences in drinking patterns across Europe.
For example, compared with under 20% in much of western and southern Europe, deaths attributable to alcohol in eastern European countries exceed 60% of all those linked to injury and violence.
Latvia, Lithuania and Russia, in particular, stood out with some of the highest alcohol-related fatal injuries, with around 23 cases per 100,000 people.
At the same time, countries like Azerbaijan, Tajikistan and Turkey reported some of the lowest rates, often less than 2.9 per 100,000.
However, some countermeasures are being taken.
Lithuania, for example, is the only Baltic nation to have banned alcohol sales to anyone under 20.
Sales before 10:00 am or after 8:00 pm (3:00 pm on Sunday) are also forbidden, while alcohol-restricting rules affect marketing too, with a total ban on alcohol advertising, including on imported magazines.
The WHO said in the report that “evidence-based measures such as raising excise taxes, reducing the availability of retailed alcohol, limiting marketing, strengthening drink–driving measures, and expanding screening and brief interventions can significantly reduce alcohol-attributable harm and prevent avoidable deaths.”
How much have alcohol drinking levels dropped?
According to the organization, in the past two decades, drinking levels dropped substantially.
In the broader WHO Europe region — which also includes the former USSR bloc — the average annual alcohol consumption fell from 11.1 liters in 2000 to 9.1 in 2022, an 18% drop, also “accompanied by notable decreases in heavy episodic drinking among both men and women”.
However, according to the OECD, most EU countries still have recorded consumption above this averagewith Romania, Portugal and Latvia topping the table.
Greece, Finland, Sweden, Belgium, the Netherlands and Italy were the only ones below 9.1 liters.