Both measures exceeded their predicted volume by more than 50 percent — and both were associated with increasing alcohol sales.
“While we cannot confirm causality, this study provides evidence for an alarming increase in alcoholic hepatitis associated with known increases in alcohol misuse during COVID-19,” said Maia S. Anderson, M.D., a general surgery resident at Michigan Medicine and the first author of the study. “And it highlights the need for public health interventions around excessive alcohol consumption.”
Alcoholic hepatitis is typically caused by heavy alcohol consumption on a regular basis and can lead to permanent scar tissue in the liver and other long-term damage, like liver failure, if left untreated.
Additional authors include Valeria S. Valbuena, M.D.; Craig S. Brown, M.D., MSc.; Seth A. Waits, M.D.; Christopher J. Sonnenday, M.D., M.H.S.; Michael Englesbe, M.D.; and Jessica L. Mellinger, M.D., MSc.