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Alcohol-Attributable Deaths and Years of Potential Life Lost — 11 States, 2006–2010

Katherine Gonzales, MPH1, Jim Roeber, MSPH2, Dafna Kanny, PhD3, Annie Tran, MPH4, Cathy Saiki, MS5, Hal Johnson, MPH6, Kristin Yeoman, MD7, Tom Safranek, MD8, Kathleen Creppage, MPH9, Alicia Lepp10, Tracy Miller, MPH10, Nato Tarkhashvili, MD11, Kristine E. Lynch, PhD12, Joanna R. Watson, DPhil13, Danielle Henderson, MPH14, Megan Christenson, MS, MPH15, Sarah Dee Geiger, PhD16 (Author affiliations at end of text)

Excessive alcohol consumption, the fourth leading preventable cause of death in the United States (1), resulted in approximately 88,000 deaths and 2.5 million years of potential life lost (YPLL) annually during 2006–2010 and cost an estimated $223.5 billion in 2006 (2). To estimate state-specific average annual rates of alcohol-attributable deaths (AAD) and YPLL caused by excessive alcohol use, 11 states analyzed 2006–2010 data (the most recent data available) using the CDC Alcohol-Related Disease Impact (ARDI) application. The age-adjusted median AAD rate was 28.5 per 100,000 population (range = 50.9 per 100,000 in New Mexico to 22.4 per 100,000 in Utah). The median YPLL rate was 823 per 100,000 (range = 1,534 YPLL per 100,000 for New Mexico to 634 per 100,000 in Utah). The majority of AAD (median = 70%) and YPLL (median = 82%) were among working-age (20–64 years) adults. Routine monitoring of alcohol-attributable health outcomes, including deaths and YPLL, in states could support the planning and implementation of evidence-based prevention strategies recommended by the Community Preventive Services Task Force to reduce excessive drinking and related harms. Such strategies include increasing the price of alcohol, limiting alcohol outlet density, and holding alcohol retailers liable for harms related to the sale of alcoholic beverages to minors and intoxicated patrons (dram shop liability) (3).

The ARDI Custom Data module* was used for this analysis by 11 states (California, Florida, Michigan, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Virginia, and Wisconsin) participating in the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists' Alcohol Subcommittee. ARDI estimates AAD and YPLL resulting from excessive alcohol use by using multiple data sources and methods (4). ARDI estimates AAD by multiplying the number of age- and sex-specific deaths from 54 alcohol-related conditions by the alcohol-attributable fractions (AAF) for that condition. AAF are used to express the extent to which alcohol consumption contributes to a health outcome. AAF estimate the proportion of deaths from various causes that are directly or indirectly attributable to alcohol consumption. The AAF range from 1.0 for 15 conditions (e.g., alcoholic liver disease and alcoholic polyneuropathy) to as low as 0.01 (e.g., hypertension and hemorrhagic stroke in females). The AAF used in ARDI and for this analysis are provided in the application. YPLL by age, sex, and race/ethnicity were calculated by multiplying age- and sex-specific AAD estimates for each cause by the corresponding life expectancy estimate at the time of death.§ For chronic causes of death (e.g., liver disease), AAD and YPLL were estimated for decedents aged ≥20 years; for acute causes, they were estimated for decedents aged ≥15 years. AAD and YPLL also were estimated for persons aged <15 years who died from motor-vehicle crashes, child maltreatment, or low birth weight. State death certificate data from 2006–2010, the most recent available for participating states, were used to determine the average annual number of alcohol-related deaths for the 54 alcohol-related conditions assessed by the ARDI application and to obtain decedent demographic information. Death records missing data on decedent age, sex, or race/ethnicity were excluded. Prevalence data on alcohol use for 2006–2010 were obtained from state Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Systems and used to calculate AAF for most chronic conditions profiled in ARDI. Average annual state rates for AAD and YPLL per 100,000 population for 2006–2010 were calculated by dividing the average annual AAD and YPLL estimates for 2006–2010 by the average annual bridged-race population estimates from the U.S. Census for 2006–2010, and then multiplying by 100,000. The rates were then age-adjusted to the 2000 U.S. population.

During 2006–2010, the median age-adjusted AAD rate was 28.5 per 100,000 (state median AAD = 1,647; rate range = 50.9 deaths per 100,000 in New Mexico to 22.4 per 100,000 in Utah) (Table 1). The median AAD rates increased with age, and the majority of AAD (median 70%) involved working-age (20–64 years) adults. The median AAD rate was highest (60.3 per 100,000) for persons aged ≥65 years and lowest (4.1 per 100,000) for persons aged 0–19 years. The median age-adjusted AAD rate for men (42.4 per 100,000) was more than twice the median age-adjusted AAD rate for women (15.8 per 100,000). AAD rates varied substantially by race and ethnicity; some states (e.g., North Dakota and South Dakota) had very high rates of AAD among American Indians/Alaska Natives (AI/AN), whereas rates in other states (California, Michigan, and Virginia) were highest among blacks (Table 1).

During 2006–2010, the median age-adjusted YPLL rate was 823 per 100,000 population (state median YPLL = 42,756; rate range = 1,534 YPLL per 100,000 in New Mexico to 634 YPLL per 100,000 in Utah) (Table 2). The median YPLL rates were highest among persons aged 35–49 years (state median YPLL = 12,486; median state rate = 1,183 per 100,000) and lowest among persons aged 0–19 years (state median YPLL = 3,285; median state rate = 256 per 100,000). A median of 82% of all alcohol-attributable YPLL involved working-age adults (range = 85% in New Mexico to 78% in Nebraska). The median YPLL rate for men (1,215 per 100,000) was more than twice the median rate for women (456 per 100,000). YPLL rates were highest for AI/AN, ranging from 4,195 YPLL (South Dakota) to 200 YPLL per 100,000 (Virginia) (Table 2).

Editorial Note

During 2006–2010, excessive alcohol use resulted in a median annual age-adjusted AAD rate of 28.5 per 100,000 population and a median YPLL rate of 823 per 100,000 in the 11 states studied. Approximately two out of three deaths and four out of five YPLL were among working-aged adults, and more than two thirds of AAD and YPLL involved males. Although the majority of AAD involved non-Hispanic whites, the median AAD rate for AI/AN (60.6 per 100,000) was twice as high as the AAD rate for any other racial or ethnic group. These findings are consistent with other published estimates on the distribution of AAD and YPLL by sex (4), disparities by race/ethnicity within states (5), and differences in AI/AN rates among states (6).

The findings in this report highlight the ongoing public health impact of excessive drinking in the United States, as well as the geographic and demographic disparities in AAD and YPLL. Differences in age-adjusted rates of AAD and YPLL among states probably reflect differences in the prevalence of excessive drinking (7), which is affected by various factors, including state and local laws governing the price, availability, and marketing of alcoholic beverages (8). These death rates also might reflect the influence of other factors (e.g., rurality and access to trauma care) that could affect the risk for death from alcohol-attributable conditions (9). The high rates of AAD and YPLL among working-age adults further highlight the impact of excessive alcohol use throughout a person's lifespan, and were a major contributor to alcohol-attributable productivity losses from premature mortality that, together with lost wages, were responsible for 72% of the estimated $223.5 billion in economic costs in 2006 (2). The AAD and YPLL rates were lower among the 0–19 years age group because this age group had fewer AAD compared with other age groups.

The findings in this report are subject to at least seven limitations. First, ARDI exclusively uses the underlying cause of death and does not consider contributing causes that might be alcohol-related. Second, ARDI does not include AAD estimates for several causes (e.g., tuberculosis) for which excessive alcohol use is believed to be an important risk factor. Third, the alcohol data used to calculate AAF estimates were based on self-reports and might underestimate the actual prevalence of excessive alcohol use (10). Fourth, state estimates calculated in this study might be different than those available in the ARDI application. Fifth, national AAF data were used, even though studies suggest that there are important state differences in AAF for some causes of alcohol-attributable deaths. Sixth, AAD and YPLL rates could not be calculated for some age and race/ethnicity categories because of the small number of AAD in some of these groups. Finally, some AI/AN might have been misclassified by race on death certificates, which could have resulted in an underestimate of the number of AI/AN deaths and YPLL in states (6).

The Community Preventive Services Task Force has recommended several population-level, evidence-based strategies to reduce excessive drinking and related harms, including increasing the price of alcohol, limiting alcohol outlet density, and holding alcohol retailers liable for harms related to the sale of alcoholic beverages to minors and intoxicated patrons (dram shop liability) (3). Routine monitoring of alcohol-attributable health outcomes, including deaths and YPLL, in states could support the planning and implementation of evidence-based prevention strategies to reduce excessive drinking and related harms.

1Michigan Department of Community Health; 2New Mexico Department of Health; 3Division of Population Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, CDC; 4Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE); 5California Department of Public Health; 6Florida Department of Children and Families; 7CDC EIS Officer (Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services); 8Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services; 9CDC/CSTE Applied Epidemiology Fellow (North Carolina Division of Public Health); 10North Dakota Department of Health; 11CDC Career Epidemiology Field Officer, Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response (South Dakota Department of Health); 12CDC/CSTE Applied Epidemiology Fellow (Utah Department of Health); 13CDC EIS Officer (Utah Department of Health); 14Virginia Department of Health; 15CDC/CSTE Applied Epidemiology Fellow (Wisconsin Division of Public Health); 16Wisconsin Division of Public Health (Corresponding author: Katherine Gonzales, gonzalesk2@michigan.gov, 517-335-5027)

References

  1. Mokdad AH, Marks JS, Stroup DF, et al. Actual causes of death in the United States, 2000. JAMA 2004;291:1238–45.
  2. Bouchery EE, Harwood H, Sacks JJ, Simon CJ, Brewer RD. Economic costs of excessive alcohol consumption in the U.S., 2006. Am J Prev Med 2011;41:516–24.
  3. Community Preventive Services Task Force. Preventing excessive alcohol consumption. In: The guide to community preventive services. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 2005. Available at http://www.thecommunityguide.org/alcohol/index.html.
  4. CDC. Alcohol-attributable deaths and years of potential life lost—United States, 2001. MMWR 2004;53:866–70.
  5. Sutocky JW, Shultz JM, Kizer KW. Alcohol-related mortality in California, 1980 to 1989. Am J Public Health 1993;83:817–23.
  6. CDC. Alcohol-attributable deaths and years of potential life lost among American Indians and Alaska Natives—United States, 2001–2005. MMWR 2008;57:938–41.
  7. CDC. Binge drinking—United States, 2011. MMWR 2013;62(Suppl 3):77–80.
  8. Naimi TS, Blanchette J, Nelson TF, et al. A new scale of the U.S. alcohol policy environment and its relationship to binge drinking. Am J Prev Med 2014;46:10–6.
  9. Branas CC, MacKenzie EJ, Williams JC, et al. Access to trauma centers in the United States. JAMA 2005;293:2626–33.
  10. Stockwell T, Donath S, Cooper-Stanbury M, et al. Under-reporting of alcohol consumption in household surveys: a comparison of quantity-frequency, graduate-frequency and recent recall. Addiction 2004;99:1024–33.


What is already known on this topic?

The health consequences of excessive alcohol use vary across geographically diverse states and include substantial disparities in alcohol-related outcomes by sex and race/ethnicity.

What is added by this report?

Adjusted to the 2000 U.S. standard population, in a convenience sample of 11 states, the median alcohol-attributable death (AAD) rate was 28.5 per 100,000, and the median years of potential life lost (YPLL) was 823 per 100,000 during 2006–2010. The majority of AAD (median 70%) and YPLL (median = 82%) were among working-age adults (aged 20–64 years).

What are the implications for public health practice?

Routine monitoring of alcohol-attributable health outcomes, including deaths and YPLL, in states could support the planning and implementation of evidence-based prevention strategies recommended by the Community Preventive Services Task Force to reduce excessive drinking and related harms. Such strategies include increasing the price of alcohol, limiting alcohol outlet density, and holding alcohol retailers liable for harms related to the sale of alcoholic beverages to minors and intoxicated patrons (dram shop liability).


TABLE 1. Average annual alcohol-attributable deaths (AAD)* and rates, by selected characteristics — 11 U.S. states, 2006–2010

Characteristic

California

Florida

Michigan

Nebraska

New Mexico

AAD

Rate

AAD

Rate

AAD

Rate

AAD

Rate

AAD

Rate

Age group (yrs)

0–19

390

3.7

185

4.1

121

4.4

21

4.2

34

6.0

20–34

1,583

20.1

1,014

29.3

430

23.1

66

17.9

166

41.6

35–49

2,546

31.8

1,451

37.3

709

33.4

95

26.5

289

72.2

50–64

3,398

56.3

1,879

53.6

916

47.4

113

34.5

299

78.0

≥65

2,578

64.8

1,718

54.8

926

70.2

141

58.6

245

94.5

Sex§

Male

7,589

43.9

4,460

46.3

2,095

42.4

295

33.4

723

73.4

Female

2,906

15.8

1,788

16.6

1,006

18.1

140

14.6

310

29.4

Race/Ethnicity§¶

AI/AN

129

25.4

17

20.2

29

40.7

12

65.4

182

99.2

A/NH/PI

589

11.9

40

8.3

21

11.0

—**

—**

—**

—**

Black

913

36.6

725

25.4

594

42.9

24

29.7

16

31.8

White, Hispanic

3,013

33.4

792

22.0

44

16.3

20

19.9

409

53.3

White, non-Hispanic

5,775

31.2

4,613

35.2

2,342

27.4

372

22.7

411

40.2

Total§

10,495

29.4

6,248

31.0

3,102

29.9

436

23.7

1,033

50.9


TABLE 1. (Continued) Average annual alcohol-attributable deaths (AAD)* and rates, by selected characteristics — 11 U.S. states, 2006–2010

Characteristic

North Carolina

North Dakota

South Dakota

Utah

Virginia

Wisconsin

AAD

Rate

AAD

Rate

AAD

Rate

AAD

Rate

AAD

Rate

AAD

Rate

Age group (yrs)

0–19

106

4.2

—**

—**

12

5.4

23

2.5

73

3.5

54

3.6

20–34

502

27.0

27

18.9

40

25.0

103

15.7

320

19.7

214

19.6

35–49

669

33.1

45

36.2

60

39.1

124

26.3

448

25.6

352

29.2

50–64

753

44.0

42

33.4

66

44.2

146

39.6

512

34.8

451

41.9

≥65

676

57.8

58

60.3

81

70.8

117

49.7

480

51.6

577

76.4

Sex§

Male

1,930

42.7

123

36.6

175

43.9

354

31.0

1,297

33.7

1,092

38.5

Female

777

15.4

56

15.8

83

19.4

158

13.9

535

12.7

555

17.7

Race/Ethnicity§¶

AI/AN

47

35.2

36

122.8

74

133.2

19

60.6

—**

—**

32

61.4

A/NH/PI

15

8.8

—**

—**

—**

—**

—**

—**

32

8.6

14

15.1

Black

578

29.3

—**

—**

—**

—**

—**

—**

388

25.4

121

39.0

White, Hispanic

109

20.5

—**

—**

—**

—**

50

25.4

68

16.4

46

26.4

White, non-Hispanic

1,953

28.6

139

21.4

178

23.4

430

21.9

1,338

23.5

1,433

27.0

Total§

2,707

28.5

179

26.2

259

31.5

513

22.4

1,832

22.8

1,647

27.9

Abbreviations: AAD = alcohol-attributable deaths; AI/AN = American Indian/Alaska Native; A/NH/PI = Asian, Native Hawaiian, or Pacific Islander.

* The CDC Alcohol-Related Disease Impact application estimates AAD resulting from excessive alcohol use by using multiple data sources and methods. Additional information on the methods is available at http://apps.nccd.cdc.gov/dach_ardi/info/methods.aspx.

Rates are age-specific per 100,000 population.

§ Rates are per 100,000 population, age-adjusted to the U.S. 2000 standard population.

Non-white Hispanics are included in the other racial groups.

** Race/ethnicity estimates <10 are suppressed.


TABLE 2. Average annual alcohol-attributable years of potential life lost (YPLL)* and rates, by selected characteristics — 11 U.S. states, 2006–2010

Characteristic

California

Florida

Michigan

Nebraska

New Mexico

YPLL

Rate

YPLL

Rate

YPLL

Rate

YPLL

Rate

YPLL

Rate

Age group (yrs)

0–19

23,736

227

11,124

247

7,565

278

1,300

256

2,106

368

20–34

79,511

1,009

51,066

1,475

21,537

1,159

3,316

905

8,281

2,073

35–49

89,917

1,123

51,528

1,324

25,161

1,185

3,399

949

10,285

2,573

50–64

80,709

1,338

44,611

1,271

21,874

1,132

2,665

817

7,148

1,867

≥65

27,187

684

17,495

558

9,250

702

1,368

568

2,538

981

Sex§

Male

221,055

1,215

126,524

1,388

59,769

1,220

8,373

940

21,508

2,201

Female

80,005

434

49,299

510

25,618

493

3,676

410

8,851

878

Race/Ethnicity§¶

AI/AN

4,013

691

569

599

905

1,159

428

2,060

6,350

3,194

A/NH/PI

16,312

309

1,254

237

658

271

97

267

160

438

Black

31,451

1,187

26,269

849

20,566

1,411

973

1,062

548

1,037

White, Hispanic

99,827

915

25,407

668

1,562

475

802

625

12,714

1,564

White, non-Hispanic

146,958

858

120,193

1,072

59,380

742

9,561

627

10,299

1,157

Total§

301,060

823

175,824

944

85,387

853

12,049

675

30,358

1,534


TABLE 2. (Continued) Average annual alcohol-attributable years of potential life lost (YPLL)* and rates, by selected characteristics — 11 U.S. states, 2006–2010

Characteristic

North Carolina

North Dakota

South Dakota

Utah

Virginia

Wisconsin

YPLL

Rate

YPLL

Rate

YPLL

Rate

YPLL

Rate

YPLL

Rate

YPLL

Rate

Age group (yrs)

0–19

6,520

260

436

256

747

333

1,427

154

4,479

217

3,285

218

20–34

25,271

1,357

1,365

950

1,990

1,258

5,149

784

16,199

999

10,782

986

35–49

23,903

1,183

1,627

1,298

2,139

1,383

4,468

944

15,945

911

12,486

1,035

50–64

17,872

1,044

984

790

1,579

1,061

3,497

951

12,137

824

10,732

999

≥65

7,143

611

570

595

790

695

1,220

518

4,943

531

5,470

724

Sex§

Male

58,658

1,285

3,520

1,057

5,038

1,277

11,027

875

38,794

986

29,662

1,048

Female

22,050

457

1,462

456

2,207

561

4,733

392

14,908

363

13,094

447

Race/Ethnicity§¶

AI/AN

1,722

1,170

1,288

3,893

2,637

4,195

673

1,794

85

200

1,069

1,819

A/NH/PI

545

251

—**

—**

28

320

225

269

935

211

473

398

Black

19,370

939

56

940

80

700

188

694

13,041

809

4,385

1,227

White, Hispanic

4,779

705

35

463

127

858

1,894

728

2,706

516

1,698

713

White, non-Hispanic

54,074

850

3,543

586

4,354

622

12,752

617

36,786

680

35,097

708

Total§

80,708

863

4,982

763

7,245

923

15,760

634

53,703

670

42,756

748

Abbreviations: YPLL = years of potential life lost; AI/AN = American Indian/Alaska Native; A/NH/PI = Asian, Native Hawaiian, or Pacific Islander.

* The CDC Alcohol-Related Disease Impact application estimates YPLL resulting from excessive alcohol use by using multiple data sources and methods. Additional information on the methods is available at http://apps.nccd.cdc.gov/dach_ardi/info/methods.aspx.

Rates are age-specific per 100,000 population.

§ Rates are per 100,000 population, age-adjusted to the U.S. 2000 standard population.

Non-white Hispanics are included in the other racial groups.

** Race/ethnicity estimates <10 are suppressed.



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