Northern Ireland

Increase in number of deaths in NI caused directly by alcohol

A total of 8,974 deaths related to alcohol-specific causes were registered in the UK last year
A total of 8,974 deaths related to alcohol-specific causes were registered in the UK last year A total of 8,974 deaths related to alcohol-specific causes were registered in the UK last year

THE number of deaths in Northern Ireland caused directly by alcohol has increased in the past year, according to new figures.

Alongside Scotland, fatalities in the north related to alcohol are among the highest in the UK.

Figures show deaths in the UK caused directly by alcohol hit a new high in 2020 after the biggest year-on-year increase since records began.

A total of 8,974 deaths related to alcohol-specific causes were registered in the UK last year, or 14.0 deaths per 100,000 people. This is up 18.6 per cent on the 7,565 deaths registered in 2019, or 11.8 per 100,000.

The rise was described as "statistically significant" by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), which published the figures.

There will be "many complex factors" behind the increase and "it may be some time before we fully understand all of these", the ONS said.

Comparable data for alcohol-specific deaths in the UK begins in 2001, and shows rates of death remained stable between 2012 and 2019.

All four UK nations saw a rise in 2020, though only England and Scotland recorded "significant" increases, according to the ONS.

Scotland had highest rate of alcohol-specific deaths last year (21.5 per 100,000 people, up from 18.6), followed by Northern Ireland (19.6, up from 18.8), Wales (13.9, up from 11.8) and England (13.0, up from 10.9).

As in previous years, the rate for males across the UK was more than double the rate for females (19.0 and 9.2 respectively).

Alcohol-specific deaths only include those health conditions where death is a direct consequence of alcohol misuse.

More than three-quarters of these deaths in 2020 were caused by alcoholic liver disease (77.8%).

A further 12.1% of deaths were caused by "mental and behavioural disorders due to the use of alcohol", while "external causes", such as accidental poisoning by alcohol, caused 6.2%.