Survey prompts rethink on heavy drinkers
US government study finds most people who "drink to get drunk" are not alcoholics, and strategies to change their behaviour could curb excessive drinking.
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MOST people who drink to get drunk are not alcoholics, a new government report concludes, suggesting that more can be done to help heavy drinkers cut back.
The finding, from a government survey of 138,100 adults, counters the conventional wisdom that every "falling-down drunk" must be addicted to alcohol.
Instead, the results from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health show that 9 of 10 people who drink too much are not addicts and can change their behaviour with a little - or perhaps a lot of - prompting.
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