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Harm-reduction experts offer tips on safe drinking

Selective focus color image depicting a caucasian woman in her 30s wearing a protective surgical face mask and plastic surgical gloves during the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic, in a bid to stop the spread of the virus. The woman is pushing her shopping cart inside a supermarket while shopping for wine and alcohol in the alcoholic drinks section of the store. Room for copy space.

Many people found themselves turning to alcohol during the pandemic, according to recent surveys and studies:

An American Psychological Association survey found that 23% of U.S. adults are drinking more alcohol than they did a year ago, and some large U.S. hospitals say admissions for alcohol-related liver disease have shot up 50% since March 2020, reports NBC News. More cases involve women and people under 40. 

Most Americans with problem drinking, however, will never seek treatment.

Of the estimated 15 million people in the United States with alcohol-use disorder, just 10% received treatment in 2019, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental health Services Administration.

For the past decade, researchers at the University of Washington School of Medicine, Washington State University, and the VA Puget Sound Health Care System have conducted studies on harm reduction in Seattle homeless shelters and have successfully helped people reduce their drinking, even when they didn’t want to stop.

Their second randomized clinical trial on the effectiveness of an approach to reduce alcohol use and alcohol problems among people in Seattle homeless shelters was published March 10 in Lancet Psychiatry. Susan Collins, co-director of the Harm Reduction Research and Treatment (HaRRT) Center at the University of Washington School of Medicine, was the lead author.

Collins and colleagues shared the following advice that could help anyone who wants to cut back on their alcohol consumption and problems:

“This approach has the potential to help anybody who would like to change their alcohol use but might not be ready or able to stop entirely,” said Collins, also a professor of psychology at WSU.

The researchers stress that learning how to reduce alcohol-related harm is a process so people should be patient in exploring the approach for themselves. For some, abstinence works. For others, it is more incremental change that is more sustainable over time.

This study was supported by a grant from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (R01AA022309) and conducted in collaboration with several agencies, including the Downtown Emergency Service Center, Evergreen Treatment Services’ REACH program, Pioneer Human Services at the former Dutch Shisler Sobering Support Center, Public Health – Seattle & King County, King County Behavioral Health and Recovery Division, and Catholic Housing Services.