Alcohol, Tobacco, and Other Drug Deaths on Rise Worldwide-By Join Together Staff

A new study shows that premature deaths from tobacco, alcohol, and other illegal drugs are rising worldwide.

According to Professor Juergen Rehm, director of Switzerland’s Addiction Research Institute, an estimated 7 million people worldwide die each year from smoking, drinking, and taking illicit drugs.

“One reason for this is increased worldwide exposure to these substances, especially in the highly populated emerging economies of Southeast Asia and China,” said Rehm. “Another is that the relative share of diseases associated with substance abuse, such as chronic disease, accidents and injuries, as well as HIV and hepatitis, are predicted to increase.”

The study found that tobacco was the world’s number-one killer in 2000, causing 4.9 million deaths. That is an increase of more than one million since 1990. While the research shows that most of the deaths occurred in developing nations, the majority of smoking-related diseases were found in industrialized countries.

The study also found that 1.8 million deaths worldwide were a result of alcohol use, while all illegal and illicit drugs caused 123,000 deaths, the vast majority which were heroin and cocaine.

Rehm presented the study’s findings during an international drug-research symposium in Perth, Australia.

SIDE NOTE: Marujuana was responsible for ZERO deaths, and entheogen use, such as that of Salvia divinorum, caused ZERO deaths, yet marijuana is illegal and used or has been tried by 1/4 of the United States population, and Salvia, which only about 10,000 people worldwide have ever tried, is on the “Drug of Concern” list of the DEA. For more information about annual causes of death from drugs, alcohol, and entheogens, check out our article on the Annual Causes of Death In America.

 

Reprinted with permission from The Partnership at DrugFree