The United States is hardly the only country where heavy and binge drinking is a problem. But Americans face a unique crisis: This country’s obesity and diabetes epidemics, combined with heavy alcohol use, are causing more people to get sick from a liver disease that, until recently, didn’t even have a name.
Metabolic dysfunction and alcohol-associated liver disease, or MetALD, is now a leading concern among doctors in the U.S. as more young people and women face serious illness and die from the condition. Doctors worry that many more Americans might be silently developing MetALD, at least in part because many people do not realize they are drinking too much.
MetALD occurs in people who have liver fat, metabolic risk factors — obesity, prediabetes or diabetes, high blood pressure, or high cholesterol — and who have more than 10 alcoholic drinks per week for women, or more than 15 for men.
The share of Americans who meet those criteria has more than doubled since 1990, some studies suggest. Nearly 1 in 10 U.S. adults report overlapping heavy drinking and obesity, according to a recent JAMA Internal Medicine study.
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