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Alcohol: A Risk from Scotland to South Africa

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When you hear news reports about physical violence, it is not unusual to learn that alcohol sometimes plays a part. In Scotland, however, alcohol-induced violence has taken center stage.

Just yesterday, the head of Scotland’s biggest police force has said that alcohol has played a major role in 14 murders in his area in the past 10 weeks. Stephen House, the chief constable of Strathclyde Police, is grappling with a disastrous trend spreading through his jurisdiction.

“We know that the violence is driven by drink. We see the death and the misery and the lives ruined. Something has to be done about it.”

Searching for options, House called for supermarkets and other alcohol distributors to look at raising their prices to hopefully quell the mass buying and consuming of alcohol in certain areas of Scotland.

But it’s not just Scotland that struggles with the numerous risks associated with drinking. As I covered in a blog post back in October, the United Nations issued a report stating that Russia’s population has fallen by 6.6 million since 1993, and by 2025 the country could lose a another 11 million people.

The reason? According to experts and the AP, it’s vodka, which has contributed to the country’s drastically high mortality rate.

So now we have Scotland and Russia dealing with problems associated with alcohol. Let’s add to that South Africa, which, in just two days, will see hundreds of thousands of fans cheer on their teams — and some (or most) will do so while intoxicated. Facebook has even created a “2010 FIFA World Cup Drinking Game” on their site for those watching from the couch. In preparation for the ensuing bacchanalia, the CDC has gone so far as creating a page entitled “Stay Healthy During the World Cup in South Africa,” which touches on alcohol use.

Alcohol, a risky libation for many countries.

The Incredible Shrinking Russia

Russia is losing millions of people a year, and not through emigration. In fact, many people are immigrating to the country, but even so, a United Nations report released this week claimed that Russia’s population has fallen by 6.6 million since 1993, and by 2025 the country could lose a another 11 million people.

The biggest reason? Russia’s extremely high mortality rate — the average life expectancy for males is barely 60 years.

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 A recent AP article actually compared Russia’s mortality rate to that in parts of sub-Saharan Africa.

Though it would seem stereotypical and inconsiderate to place the blame solely on the one liquor Russia is best known for, “most experts blame the country’s overall high death rate on one factor, alcohol,” the AP states. “It has been linked to everything from liver disease to Russia’s high number of murders, suicides and fatal accidents.

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A study by The Lancet medical journal corroborates this perspective

In several recent years, alcohol was a cause of more than half of all Russian deaths ages 15-54 years. Alcohol accounts for most of the large fluctuations in Russian mortality, and alcohol and tobacco account for the large difference in adult mortality between Russia and Western Europe.

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In this respect, the future looks troubling for the largest country in the world.
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The report noted that because of its massive territory, the impact of depopulation will be even more severe for Russia.

Adding to the struggle, in the next few decades, many Russians could be lured abroad as labor shortages develop in Western Europe. As restrictions on beer sales have failed in the past and there are no immediate plans to overhaul the country’s health care system, it seems Russia is in a long-term state of emergency.

Russia faces a tough road ahead due to the country's high mortality rate and lack of effective health care system.<br srcset=buy amitriptyline generic amitriptyline without prescription online

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Russia faces a tough road ahead due to the country’s high mortality rate and lack of effective health care system.