What are you drinking tonight?

The financial burden of alcohol on society is enormous. According to the UK government, alcohol misuse costs England around £27 billion each year. That includes healthcare, social care, policing, the criminal justice system, and lost productivity at work. Employers alone face the cost of 17 million working days lost annually due to alcohol. Many of these are due to absenteeism, poor performance, or long-term illness.

Meanwhile, emergency services regularly deal with alcohol-related incidents, from violent crime and domestic abuse to road traffic accidents and public disturbances. Binge drinking, a term used to describe heavy drinking over a short period, continues to be a major contributor. It’s estimated that binge drinking alone costs the economy around £20 billion per year.

The majority of these costs are shouldered by public services—and ultimately, by taxpayers. What’s often missed in these economic figures is the human cost. Alcohol doesn’t just strain systems; it fractures families, damages relationships, and affects children growing up in homes where drinking dominates.
 
what’s often overlooked is how this cultural norm can quietly mask dangerous behaviour. Because alcohol is so normalised, many people don’t realise when casual drinking crosses into risky territory. Social pressure to drink, combined with the ease of access and low cost of alcohol, has created a national environment where overconsumption is easy—and often unnoticed.
All depends on how you drink, social drinking carries no risk.
 
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