Alcohol, drugs and suicide cause more than 150 'deaths of despair' in Lancaster and Morecambe
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Researchers from the University of Manchester analysed coroners' court records from 2019 to 2021.
Their analysis showed 46,200 people lost their lives due to drugs, alcohol or suicide in England – the equivalent of 42 people per day.
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Hide AdIn the Lancaster district, there were 72 deaths linked to alcohol, 44 caused by drugs and 45 suicides reported during the same period – which includes the start of the coronavirus pandemic.
In total, there were 161 'deaths of despair', a collective term for deaths from these causes.
It meant the area was ranked 30th out of 308 local authorities in England with a mortality rate of 49.1 deaths per 100,000 people.
Blackpool experienced the highest rate of deaths of despair, with 83.8, followed by Middlesbrough and Hartlepool. Of the 20 areas with the highest rates, 16 were in the north of England. Barnet, in north London, had the lowest rate at 14.5 followed by Bromley in Greater London and Thurrock in Essex.
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Hide AdThe study found local authorities with higher proportions of unemployment, white British ethnicity and people living alone had higher mortality rates.
Urban and economically inactive areas also tended to have higher rates.
Lead author Christine Camacho said specific public health interventions and more wide-reaching and faster levelling up across England are needed to tackle the underlying inequalities which lead people to die from despair.
Lee Fernandes, lead therapist at alcohol treatment provider the UK Addiction Treatment Group, called the UK a "nation of binge drinkers", which led to "unhealthy drinking habits across almost all generations".
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Hide AdHe added alcohol's legal status gives it less "stigma" than other drugs, meaning medical professionals may not take excess drinking as seriously.
"Until that misconception is addressed, more people will continue to die from alcohol," he added.
Nat Travis, national head of service at health and social care provider Turning Point, said the research "highlights the need for continued government investment into treatment services".
"What we often see, are more people coming to us at a later stage when they are far more unwell, which makes it harder to undo the damage that's already been done due to substance use," she said.