Alcohol-related hospital admissions are falling in Lincolnshire

Hospital admissions for conditions directly caused by alcohol abuse have gone down in Lincolnshire, bucking the national trend, according to new Public Health England figures.
Hospital admissions for alcohol abuse have fallen in the county.Hospital admissions for alcohol abuse have fallen in the county.
Hospital admissions for alcohol abuse have fallen in the county.

In Lincolnshire, there were 2,510 admissions directly linked to excessive drinking in the 12 months to March 2018.

That's 13 per cent less than five years earlier.

The data only includes patients suffering conditions which are entirely attributable to alcohol abuse, such as liver cirrhosis.

Hospital admissions for alcohol abuse have fallen in the county.Hospital admissions for alcohol abuse have fallen in the county.
Hospital admissions for alcohol abuse have fallen in the county.
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That means 333 in every 100,000 people living in the area went to hospital over the last year due to a condition directly related to drinking, such as cirrhosis of the liver.

Across England, 304,073 people were taken to hospital for conditions caused by alcohol abuse - three per cent higher than five years earlier.

The British Liver Trust says those figures are 'alarming' and put them down to an increasing drinking culture amongst middle aged and older drinkers.

Admissions of under-age drinkers have also dropped.

There were 93 between April 2015 and March 2018, compared with 205 in 2010-13.

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The figures for children are measured over a three-year period due to low numbers.

Vanessa Hebditch, director of policy at the British Liver Trust, said the Government should increase taxes on alcoholic drinks or set a minimum unit price.

She said: "Over the last 30 years, there has been a big shift in the UK’s drinking culture, particularly amongst middle aged and older drinkers.

"Filling up your supermarket trolley with wine and drinking at home has become increasingly acceptable and affordable.

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"The Government should act to address this through taxation such as by creating a minimum unit price."

Scotland introduced a minimum unit price of 50p in May 2017, while the Welsh Government is planning to implement the same measure next summer.

Dr John Larsen, director of evidence and impact for alcohol education charity Drinkaware, warned that young people are increasingly more likely to binge drink.

He said: "The more alcohol people drink, the greater their risk of developing a serious condition, such as high blood pressure and heart disease, as well as seven types of cancer.

"Men and women should not drink more than 14 units a week on a regular basis."

The Government estimates alcohol misuse costs the NHS about £3.5 billion each year.