Jeffrey J. Sacks
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jeffrey J. Sacks.
American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2011
Ellen Bouchery; Henrick J. Harwood; Jeffrey J. Sacks; Carol J. Simon; Robert D. Brewer
BACKGROUNDnExcessive alcohol consumption causes premature death (average of 79,000 deaths annually); increased disease and injury; property damage from fire and motor vehicle crashes; alcohol-related crime; and lost productivity. However, its economic cost has not been assessed for the U.S. since 1998.nnnPURPOSEnTo update prior national estimates of the economic costs of excessive drinking.nnnMETHODSnThis study (conducted 2009-2010) followed U.S. Public Health Service Guidelines to assess the economic cost of excessive alcohol consumption in 2006. Costs for health care, productivity losses, and other effects (e.g., property damage) in 2006 were obtained from national databases. Alcohol-attributable fractions were obtained from multiple sources and used to assess the proportion of costs that could be attributed to excessive alcohol consumption.nnnRESULTSnThe estimated economic cost of excessive drinking was
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1992
Carol S. Wolf Runyan; Shrikant I. Bangdiwala; Mary A. Linzer; Jeffrey J. Sacks; John D. Butts
223.5 billion in 2006 (72.2% from lost productivity, 11.0% from healthcare costs, 9.4% from criminal justice costs, and 7.5% from other effects) or approximately
Violence & Victims | 2001
Thomas R. Simon; Michael Anderson; Martie P. Thompson; Alexander E. Crosby; Gene Shelley; Jeffrey J. Sacks
1.90 per alcoholic drink. Binge drinking resulted in costs of
Arthritis Care and Research | 2010
Jeffrey J. Sacks; Yao-Hua Luo; Charles G. Helmick
170.7 billion (76.4% of the total); underage drinking
Injury Prevention | 2008
Julie Gilchrist; Jeffrey J. Sacks; D. White; Marcie-jo Kresnow
24.6 [corrected] billion; and drinking during pregnancy
Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism | 2010
Debra Lubar; Patience H. White; Leigh F. Callahan; Rowland W. Chang; Charles G. Helmick; Debra R. Lappin; Amy Melnick; Roland W. Moskowitz; Erica Odom; Jeffrey J. Sacks; Susan Baker Toal; Mary Waterman
5.2 billion. The cost of alcohol-attributable crime was
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 1998
Kenneth E. Powell; Gregory W. Heath; Marcie-jo Kresnow; Jeffrey J. Sacks; Christine M. Branche
73.3 billion. The cost to government was
American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 1998
Ruth A. Shults; Jeffrey J. Sacks; Laurel A. Briske; Pamela H. Dickey; Mark R. Kinde; Sue Mallonee; Malinda Reddish Douglas
94.2 billion (42.1% of the total cost), which corresponds to about
Journal of Adolescent Health | 2001
Sherry A Everett; Ruth A. Shults; Lisa C. Barrios; Jeffrey J. Sacks; Richard Lowry; John E. Oeltmann
0.80 per alcoholic drink consumed in 2006 (categories are not mutually exclusive and may overlap).nnnCONCLUSIONSnOn a per capita basis, the economic impact of excessive alcohol consumption in the U.S. is approximately
Patient Education and Counseling | 2002
Nancy J. Thompson; David A. Sleet; Jeffrey J. Sacks
746 per person, most of which is attributable to binge drinking. Evidence-based strategies for reducing excessive drinking should be widely implemented.