Tuesday, August 29, 2023
EDITOR, The Tribune.
Recently I was informed by a businessman that one of his employees died unexpectedly. Even without the benefit of an autopsy, the grieving businessman is convinced that his employee's excessive drinking played a significant part in his demise. About three years ago an individual I personally knew drowned due to his inebriation. He was also a chronic alcoholic. I know of another young Bahamian, about 41-years-old, who is always either drunk or sobering up.
Bahamian stakeholders seem to be either oblivious or nonchalant about the ongoing destruction of so many lives due to the high amount of alcohol consumption in this country, made possible by the plethora of liquor stores and taverns. It would appear that the government has made it extremely easy for aspiring businessmen to attain a liquor licence. It would be interesting to know if the Ministry of Health has conducted a study on the level of chronic alcoholism among Bahamians. Based on the crowded taverns on Thursday and Friday evenings, it would appear that we have a massive problem on our hands that is being conveniently ignored.
The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention in the United States claimed that in 2010 alone the economic costs of alcoholic consumption was estimated at $249 billion. Between 2015-2019, one in five deaths in the United States was caused by excessive drinking of individuals between the ages of 20 and 49. Some of the short term health risks of binge drinking are injuries sustained from car accidents, falls, drownings and burns. Other risks includes violence such as homicide, suicide, sexual assault and intimate partner violence. Inebriated individuals lack coherence and sound judgment. Alcoholic poisoning, fetal alcohol spectrum disorders and risky sexual behaviours are other short term health risks, according to the CDC. Long term health risks includes high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, liver disease and digestive problems. Alcoholics are also at risk of contracting cancer in the mouth, breasts, throat, esophagus, voice box, liver, colon and rectum.
Additionally, excessive drinking can weaken one's immune system; cause dementia and social problems in the home and on the job. I knew a woman who was verbally and physically abused by her husband who was a chronic alcoholic. His death, I believe, was related to his binge drinking. His son inherited his violent behaviour, as he was also physically abusive towards his wife. This is one of the catastrophic results of the liquor industry in this country. Inebriated men are also known to sexually abuse their underage dependents. Many Bahamian winebibbers want to stop but are now struggling with alcohol use disorder.
We are in a crisis made possible by the unwitting assistance of the government of the Bahamas in allowing so many liquor stores to open. The government has recently talked about introducing a sin tax on greasy foods in order to reduce the high rate of noncommunicable diseases among obese Bahamians. Yet it is sitting idly by while the liquor industry is reeking havoc in the lives of thousands of Bahamians.
KEVIN EVANS
Freeport,
Grand Bahama,
August 28, 2023.
Comments
Porcupine says...
Yes Kevin,
The web shops ain't helping either.
We don't seem to care, do we?
Posted 29 August 2023, 7:40 p.m. Suggest removal
FreeportFreddy says...
Hey Kevin, can I buy you a drink?
Posted 30 August 2023, 8:43 a.m. Suggest removal
AnObserver says...
Please do, he needs one.
Posted 30 August 2023, 12:10 p.m. Suggest removal
ohdrap4 says...
the sin tax is on sweetened beverages. Beverages only. Not on cake or candy or potato chips or any greasy foods.
and they will inplement the sugar tax only when they join the WTO, right after the enactment of teFOIA.
Posted 30 August 2023, 4:31 p.m. Suggest removal
ThisIsOurs says...
I notice a weird trend among many of the Netflix shows. They *romanticize* drinking, getting drunk and the after effects of being drunk. Drinking is portrayed as almost a part of work and something the chic must do. This is the deception that leads many a predisposed addictive personality down the road to alcoholism. And yes they can develop addictions to food as well.
The writer makes some causation links between drinking and abuse, but ignores the fact that not all people who drink beat their spouses and children bloody. Abusers are still abusers even in the absence of alcohol. What possibly could be said is that drinking increases the volatility of already tense environments
A good message to drill into young people is probably everything een for everybody, *to thine own self be true*
Posted 31 August 2023, 12:14 a.m. Suggest removal
hrysippus says...
Humans have been consuming alcohol for thousands of years.Jesus is famed for creating alcoholic wine from water at Canae. Excess consumption of alcohol causes myriad problems, I think most people know and accept this as fact. Now let us consider another popular drug prevalent in this country; refined white sugar. White sugar has only been consumed by humans for a few hundred years yet it has caused more death and disease than any other drug but we ignore that and buy hundreds of pounds every year and feed that to our children. Think about that, Kevin, if you are able.
Posted 31 August 2023, 7 p.m. Suggest removal
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