PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Rates of alcohol-induced deaths among the general population nearly doubled from 1999 to 2024

With females aged 25-34 showing a 255 percent surge in alcohol-related deaths during this time period

2025-09-17
(Press-News.org) In an analysis by race, sex, age, and geography, alcohol-induced death rates in 2024 are nearly double those in 1999, with a sharp increase at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Although rates are higher for men, the largest increase in alcohol-induced deaths over the full 25-year period occurred in females aged 25-34, according to a study published on September 17 by Dr. Tony Wong and colleagues at UCLA in the open-access journal PLOS Global Public Health.

Alcohol-induced deaths have been increasing over the past two decades. Particularly concering are increases between 2019 and 2021, when the population was under significant stress from isolation due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and people with alcohol-use disorders were less able to access treatment. Quantifying mortality trends and determining whether alcohol-induced deaths have returned to pre-pandemic levels is essential for understanding long-term temporal patterns and dynamics. To examine these trends, the authors of this study analyzed data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Vital Statistics System, focusing on 14 specific alcohol-induced causes of death.

Wong et al. found that rates of alcohol-induced deaths in the United States nearly doubled between 1999 and 2024, reaching their highest level in 2021. Most deaths are due to alcoholic liver disease and, to a lesser degree, alcohol-related mental and behavioral disorders. The largest overall increase in alcohol-induced mortality across all race, sex, age groups occurred in 2021 when fatalities peaked at 54,258 deaths overall. By 2024, fatalities had declined, but the average alcohol-induced mortality rate across U.S. counties remained approximately 25% higher than in 2019.

American Indian/Alaska Native populations (AIAN) remain the most affected, with male AIAN rates of alcohol-induced mortality three times higher than that of white males, and female AIAN mortality rates four times higher than that of white females, over the entire period of investigation.

The largest increase by demographic was among females aged 25-34, which rose from 0.9 deaths per 100,000 in 1999 to 3.2 per 100,000 in 2024 — a 255 percent increase. The second largest increase was in males aged 25-34, from 2.3 fatalities per 100,000 in 1999 to 6.5 in 2024 — a 188 percent increase. As deaths from chronic diseases related to alcohol use, such as certain cancers or cardiovascular events, were not included in this study, the overall fatality counts may be underestimated. These findings underscore the critical need for targeted policies to reduce excessive alcohol consumption and improve access to treatment for those who need it most.

Senior author Maria R D’Orsogna adds: "The rapid rise of alcohol-induced deaths among women is particularly concerning. Although men still die at higher rates, the gender gap appears to be closing. Notably, for the population aged 25-34, the male-to-female mortality ratio has decreased from three-to-one in 1999 to two-to-one in 2024."

The authors conclude: "The rise in alcohol-induced mortality is widespread and affects the entire country, with particularly large surges arising during the COVID-19 pandemic. In the early months of the pandemic, alcohol-induced deaths among AIAN males increased by as much as 40% in a single month and remained unusually high for nearly four years. Similar trends were observed among AIAN and Black females, whose alcohol-induced death rates rose by over 30% in one month."

  

In your coverage please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS Global Public Health: https://plos.io/4nra5UI

Citation: Wong T, Böttcher L, Chou T, D’Orsogna MR (2025) Alcohol-induced deaths in the United States across age, race, gender, geography, and the COVID-19 pandemic. PLOS Glob Public Health 5(9): e0004623. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0004623

Author Countries: United States

Funding: This work was supported by the ARO through a grant [W911NF-23-1-0129 to LB and MRD], and by the U.S. National Science Foundation through a grant [OAC-2320846 to MRD]. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

PLOS One study: In adolescent lab animals exposed to cocaine, High-Intensity Interval Training boosts aversion to the drug

2025-09-17
BUFFALO, N.Y. — People with substance use disorder who participate in recovery running programs have shown improved success in maintaining their sobriety and reducing their risk for relapse. Those observations led Panayotis Thanos, a University at Buffalo neuroscientist who studies the brain’s reward system, to try to figure out the brain mechanisms behind that phenomenon. In a new study published today in PLOS One, Thanos, PhD, senior research scientist in the Clinical and Research Institute on Addictions in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB, and co-authors reveal that ...

Scientists identify four ways our bodies respond to COVID-19 vaccines

2025-09-17
Two healthcare workers get COVID-19 vaccinations on the same day. Both show strong antibody responses initially, but six months later one stays healthy while the other contracts the virus. A new study published in Science Translational Medicine could help explain this difference. Researchers tracked individuals’ antibody levels after vaccinations and identified four distinct patterns of immune response after the first booster vaccination. Notably, the group that started with the highest antibody levels but experienced a faster decline were infected earlier. People with lower blood levels of IgA(S) antibodies, ...

Stronger together: A new fusion protein boosts cancer immunotherapy

2025-09-17
A newly developed molecule brings together two powerful immunotherapy strategies in one treatment. Researchers at the University of Basel and University Hospital Basel, Switzerland, have demonstrated that this fusion protein can both block the “do not attack” signal used by cancer cells and selectively activate tumor-fighting immune cells. This dual action could pave the way for more effective cancer therapies with fewer side effects. Back in the early 1980s, Linda Taylor, just 33 years old, was diagnosed with advanced skin cancer and faced a grim prognosis. Luckily, she met Dr. Stephen Rosenberg from the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, who treated ...

Hidden brain waves as triggers for post-seizure wandering

2025-09-17
People with temporal lobe epilepsy in particular often wander around aimlessly and unconsciously after a seizure. Researchers at the University Hospital Bonn (UKB), the University of Bonn, and the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) have identified a neurobiological mechanism that could be responsible for this so-called post-ictal wandering and potentially other postictal symptoms. According to their hypothesis, epileptic seizures are not directly responsible for post-ictal symptoms, but rather seizure-associated depolarization waves, also known as spreading depolarization (SD). The results ...

Music training can help the brain focus

2025-09-17
Musical people find it easier to focus their attention on the right sounds in noisy environments. This is shown in a new study from Karolinska Institutet published in the journal Science Advances. The results suggest that music training can be used to sharpen attention and cognition. Being able to focus on a conversation in a room full of noise is a complex task for the brain. In a new study, researchers have investigated how music training affects the brain's ability to focus attention on specific sounds. The ...

Researcher develop the first hydride ion prototype battery

2025-09-17
Hydride ion (H⁻), with their low mass and high redox potential, are considered promising charge carriers for next-generation electrochemical devices. However, the lack of efficient electrolyte with fast hydride ion conductivity, thermal stability, and electrode compatibility has hindered their practical applications. In a study published in Nature, Prof. CHEN Ping’s group from the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics (DICP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) developed a novel core–shell hydride ion electrolyte, and constructed the first rechargeable hydride ion ...

MIT researchers find a more precise way to edit the genome

2025-09-17
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- A genome-editing technique known as prime editing holds potential for treating many diseases by transforming faulty genes into functional ones. However, the process carries a small chance of inserting errors that could be harmful. MIT researchers have now found a way to dramatically lower the error rate of prime editing, using modified versions of the proteins involved in the process. This advance could make it easier to develop gene therapy treatments for a variety of diseases, the researchers say. “This ...

‘Teen’ pachycephalosaur butts into fossil record

2025-09-17
A “teenaged” pachycephalosaur from Mongolia’s Gobi Desert may provide answers to lingering questions around the dinosaur group, according to new research published today in the journal Nature. The fossil represents a new species of pachycephalosaur and is both the oldest and most complete skeleton of this dinosaur group found to date. “Pachycephalosaurs are iconic dinosaurs, but they’re also rare and mysterious,” says Lindsay Zanno, associate research professor at North Carolina State University, head of paleontology at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and corresponding ...

Study finds cocoa extract supplement reduced key marker of inflammation and aging

2025-09-17
Could cocoa extract supplements rich in cocoa flavanols reduce inflammation and, in turn, prevent age-related chronic diseases? In a new study from the COcoa Supplement and Multivitamin Outcomes Study (COSMOS), investigators from Mass General Brigham and their colleagues looked at changes in five age-related markers of inflammation among participants who received daily cocoa supplements over several years. They found that hsCRP—an inflammatory marker that can signal increased risk of cardiovascular disease—decreased in participants taking the cocoa extract supplement, suggesting its anti-inflammatory potential may ...

Obesity treatment with bariatric surgery vs GLP-1 receptor agonists

2025-09-17
About The Study: The findings of this study suggest that metabolic bariatric surgery was associated with more weight loss at lower ongoing costs compared with glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) in class II and III obesity. Further study is needed to determine if metabolic bariatric surgery should still be considered the last resort in treating obesity.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, George M. Eid, MD, email george.eid@ahn.org. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Decoding plants’ language of light

UNC Greensboro study finds ticks carrying Lyme disease moving into western NC

New implant restores blood pressure balance after spinal cord injury

New York City's medical specialist advantage may be an illusion, new NYU Tandon research shows

Could a local anesthetic that doesn’t impair motor function be within reach?

1 in 8 Italian cetacean strandings show evidence of fishery interactions, with bottlenose and striped dolphins most commonly affected, according to analysis across four decades of data and more than 5

In the wild, chimpanzees likely ingest the equivalent of several alcoholic drinks every day

Warming of 2°C intensifies Arctic carbon sink but weakens Alpine sink, study finds

Bronze and Iron Age cultures in the Middle East were committed to wine production

Indian adolescents are mostly starting their periods at an earlier age than 25 years ago

Temporary medical centers in Gaza known as "Medical Points" (MPs) treat an average of 117 people daily with only about 7 staff per MP

Rates of alcohol-induced deaths among the general population nearly doubled from 1999 to 2024

PLOS One study: In adolescent lab animals exposed to cocaine, High-Intensity Interval Training boosts aversion to the drug

Scientists identify four ways our bodies respond to COVID-19 vaccines

Stronger together: A new fusion protein boosts cancer immunotherapy

Hidden brain waves as triggers for post-seizure wandering

Music training can help the brain focus

Researcher develop the first hydride ion prototype battery

MIT researchers find a more precise way to edit the genome

‘Teen’ pachycephalosaur butts into fossil record

Study finds cocoa extract supplement reduced key marker of inflammation and aging

Obesity treatment with bariatric surgery vs GLP-1 receptor agonists

Nicotinamide for skin cancer chemoprevention

Novel way to ‘rev up’ brown fat burns calories, limits obesity in mice

USC Stem Cell-led team makes major advance toward building a synthetic kidney

Delegation to Artificial Intelligence can increase dishonest behavior

Repeated head impacts cause early neuron loss and inflammation in young athletes

BU study of young athletes finds neurodegeneration might begin before CTEa

Dr. Carl Nathan wins David and Beatrix Hamburg Award

New microscope captures large, high-resolution images of curved samples in single snapshot

[Press-News.org] Rates of alcohol-induced deaths among the general population nearly doubled from 1999 to 2024
With females aged 25-34 showing a 255 percent surge in alcohol-related deaths during this time period