Map reveals UK’s alcohol capital as NHS figures show shocking North-South divide in drink problems
A stark north-south divide has been revealed in NHS figures showing the extent of the country's chronic alcohol issues
SALFORD has been revealed as the capital of boozed-up Britain, with the latest figures showing the extent of the country's alcohol problems.
More than 1,400 out of every 100,000 residents in Salford were given prescriptions for alcohol-related issues, figures from the NHS show.
MEASURE UP: Ten worst areas for alcohol problems
The ten areas with the highest rate of prescription items dispensed per 100,000 people treated for alcohol dependency in 2017
- Salford 1,403
- North Cumbria 1,120
- Norwich 1,111
- Manchester 962
- Rotherham 931
- Sheffield 900
- North Tyneside 877
- Trafford 834
- Blackpool 813
- Heywood Middleton and Rochdale 747
MEASURE UP: Ten best areas for alcohol problems
The ten areas with the lowest rate of prescription items dispensed per 100,000 people treated for alcohol dependence in 2017
1. Horsham and Mid Sussex 24
2. Kingston 36
3. Ashford 40
4. South Lincolnshire 44
5= Milton Keynes 47
5= Surrey Downs 47
7= Bromley 50
7= Crawley 50
9. East Surrey 51
10= Surrey Heath 58
10= Tower Hamlets 58
That figure is seven times higher than the number handed out in London and 58 times more than in Horsham and Mid Sussex, where the lowest rate was recorded at 24 in every 100,000.
There also appears to be a stark north-south divide.
Across the north of England 75,000 prescription drugs connected to alcohol-related issues were dispensed last year – 486 per 100,000 people.
But in the south it was just 238 per 100,000 while in London it was 189.
Nine of the places in the bottom ten were in the north while every area in the top ten are in the south, including the capital.
Professor Colin Drummond, an expert in addiction psychiatry at King’s College London, is calling for more spending on treating alcoholism.
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He said: “Alcohol problems are associated with deprivation, which we know to be worse in the North than in the South.
“Until treatment becomes a priority for governments, the gap is not going to get any narrower.”
The total cost of the 173,000 drugs prescribed in England last year for alcohol dependence was £4.42million – up from £2.4m ten years ago.
The figures also showed that there were 5,507 alcohol-specific deaths in 2016 and 337,000 hospital admissions caused by alcohol.
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