Alcohol and Public Health
Excessive alcohol use, including underage drinking and binge drinking (drinking 5 or more drinks on an occasion for men or 4 or more drinks on an occasion for women), can lead to increased risk of health problems such as injuries, violence, liver diseases, and cancer. The CDC Alcohol Program works to strengthen the scientific foundation for preventing excessive alcohol use. Program Overview.
Introduction to alcohol, drinking patterns, excessive alcohol use...
Track Policies and Alcohol-Attributable Deaths
Binge drinking, Alcohol Use and Health, Preventing Excessive Alcohol Use…
Policy briefs, Prevention Status Reports, Vital Signs, Stategizers…
National surveys, Data, Trends, and Maps
Vital Signs, scientific studies
Other alcohol-related CDC programs, federal agencies, and organizations
Videos, webinars, infographics, podcasts, e-cards, buttons/badges
Healthy People 2020, Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2010…
CDC's Alcohol Program, CDC-funded state Alcohol Epidemiologists…
Popular Links
- 17 Billion Total Binge Drinks by US Adults Annually
- Alcohol and Breastfeeding
- CDC Guide for Measuring Alcohol Outlet Density Cdc-pdf[PDF – 13.2MB]
- Alcohol Screening and Brief Intervention for People Who Consume Alcohol and Use Opioids Cdc-pdf[PDF – 867KB]
- Vital Signs: Alcohol Poisoning Deaths in the US, 2010 — 2012
- Prevalence of Alcohol Dependence Among US Adult Drinkers, 2009 — 2011
- Reducing Alcohol Outlet Density Can Reduce Violent Crime
- A Shot of Truth: Myth Busting Excessive Alcohol UseExternal
- The Surprising Link Between Alcohol and Cancer
- Reducing Alcohol-Related Harms Through Commercial Host LiabilityExternal