Maybe it should be Alcoholism
Awareness Month. That would make more sense to me. But, even then, doesn’t
everyone know that alcoholism exists? Unless you’ve lived on a desert island or
in a bubble, how can a person not be aware of alcoholism?
I know that for some people alcoholism
is something that happens to someone else. It is in someone else’s family;
ruins someone else’s life; kills other people’s loved ones – but for some people
alcoholism just doesn’t seem to have much of a meaning to them. The belief that
alcoholism has no effect on people who do not drink is just a fantasy.
We are all, in some way or another,
affected by alcohol abuse. Here are some facts that non-drinkers may not have
ever considered.
According to the Pacific Institute
for Research and Evaluation. Costs of Underage Drinking (Updated edition. Prepared for the Office for Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention Enforcing the Underage Drinking Laws Program under
contract no. 98-AH-F8-0114. Rockville, MD: Author, 1999) the total cost
attributed to underage drinking (which includes the cost of traffic accidents,
violent crime, injuries and treatment) is over $52 million per year.
If you are thinking that is not a
cost borne by the everyday person, think again. When these expenses are not met
by the families of underage drinkers, they are picked up by social service
organizations like Medicaid which in turn translates in higher taxes and higher
medical expense for those able to pay.
In 1992, the estimated
productivity loss for employees with past or current alcoholism was $66.7
billion. (Harwood, H., et al. The
Economic Costs of Alcohol and Drug Abuse in the United States, 1992. Rockville,
MD: National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1998.) Again, you may be thinking
that would be the employers’ problem and not yours. Those losses have to be
made up somewhere. The end result is an increase in the consumer cost of
whatever that employer produces.
Here’s another thing to be aware of: When alcoholism results
in crimes for which the alcoholic becomes incarcerated who pays for their cell,
clothing, food, health care, etc? The answer is that we all do. Our taxes pay
for our prison system which is full of drug and alcohol addicted persons.
The above is just some of the economic costs forced upon
society by this thing called alcoholism. There is also an emotional toll to
pay. Let’s take a hypothetical here:
A man (we’ll call him Sober Driver) is driving home from
work and gets hit by a drunk driver (we’ll call him Drunk Driver). Sober Driver
dies instantly. Drunk Driver walks away without a scratch. How ironic is that?
But wait, it doesn’t end there.
Sober Driver had in his car a very valuable silver cup which
he planned on giving his daughter as a shower gift for his unborn grandson. The
silver cup is destroyed in the accident which is a monetary loss if you don’t
consider it was only gift he would have been able to give his only grandchild.
Now the cost is not just the cost of the cup, but the memory it would have held
which makes the cup priceless.
Sober Driver leaves behind his wife, who must now go back to
work because after years of being a “stay at home wife and Mom”, she now has to
pay the bills. She won’t make as much money as her husband because she doesn’t
have a college degree. She may need to sell the home and move to smaller quarters.
Not only is this another financial burden, but the loss of the family home
creates a feeling of displacement. She becomes depressed over the loss of both
her husband and her home. Someone else’s alcoholism has taken them both away.
The depression doesn’t end with Mrs. Sober Driver because
her daughter and son, as well as any other family members, will mourn the loss
of their beloved Mr. Sober Driver. The unborn grandson will never know his
grandfather’s laughter and delight at holding the infant in his arms.
The expense continues when we find out that Mr. Sober Driver
was an engineer who was working on a project that would make attaining fresh
water a reality for third world citizens. Someone else will pick up the
project, but it will take quite a bit of time for the new person to get up to
speed which delays the project completion by as much as a year.
There are a number of scenarios that could be read into the
expense of alcoholism as it relates to non-alcoholics. In my opinion the
awareness that we must have is that alcoholism doesn’t just cause problems for
the alcoholic or the alcoholic’s family. Alcoholism causes problems for
everyone.