scotPHO introduction:
Show Graphics  |  Text Size: A |  A+ |  A++

Alcohol: deaths

In July 2006 the Office for National Statistics, General Register Office for Scotland and the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency agreed on a harmonised definition of alcohol related deaths. This means that for the first time there is uniformity in way alcohol related deaths are reported in the UK.

It is important to note that the new selection of codes is different to that previously used by ISD. Therefore, to provide consistent trend data, GROS have extracted data back to 2000 using the new codes.

  • Alcohol-related deaths accounted for 1,411 (2.5%) of the 55,700 deaths registered in Scotland in 2008.
  • Chart 1 shows that overall the number of deaths with alcohol as the ‘underlying cause of death’ has risen from 1,292 in 2000 to 1,411 in 2008.
  • However, this has not been a consistent trend: the number of deaths has fluctuated over the past five years. The figures increased from 1,292 in 2000 to 1,525 in 2003, before falling to 1,478 in 2004. They then increased again to 1,546 in 2006, before decreasing in 2007 and then rising slightly in 2008 to 1,411.
  • The number of alcohol related deaths is higher in older age groups.
  • More men than women died of alcohol-related conditions in 2008. Chart 1 shows that, in 2008, 971 (69%) of alcohol-related deaths were in men compared with 440 (31%) which were in women. .
  • Chart 2 shows that people living in the most deprived quintile were five times more likely to die an alcohol related death than those in the least deprived quintile.

Source: GROS 

 

Please note: If you require the most up-to-date data available, please check the data sources directly as new data may have been published since these data pages were last updated. Although we endeavour to ensure that the data pages are kept up-to-date, there may be a time lag between new data being published and the relevant ScotPHO web pages being updated.

Click on the chart(s) below to view a full-sized detailed version in a new window

Chart 1

Chart 1 - link to full size chart - opens in a new window

Chart 2

Chart 2 - link to full size chart - opens in a new window