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This holiday season, whether you raise a toast, spike the punch or have a drink to take the chill out of your bones, do so thoughtfully.
Alcohol may make the seasonal celebrations feel more festive. A drink or two may seem to comfort those whose holidays aren’t particularly joyful. But increasingly, Americans are drinking more than they should, at levels that are likely to cause problems in the long run if not immediately.
If alcohol is part of your holiday plans, keep in mind the harm that over-indulgence can do to yourself or others. Be aware of friends and family who may already have difficulty keeping their drinking under control.
COVID is partly to blame for increased drinking in the U.S. Alcohol abuse is one of its legacies that just seem to keep on going long after the lockdowns are behind us. Add it to the list of such lingering pandemic effects as depression, suicide and other mental-health problems, and higher absenteeism and lower academic achievement in our schools.
Of course, alcohol use was already trending up before COVID hit early in 2020. In the years immediately preceding the pandemic, studies showed increases in the percentage of Americans who drink alcohol and in the numbers who said they were heavy drinkers or indulged in binge drinking.
Then the isolation, disruption and uncertainties of the pandemic made things a lot worse. Drinking alcohol provided one of the few ways that people could at least temporarily get some respite from the stresses and strains.