Drinking is a factor in many preventable deaths — including fatalities from traffic accidents, crimes and disease — but there may be a way to avert some of the tragedies: boost alcohol taxes.
A recent analysis published in the American Journal of Public Health found that doubling state taxes on alcohol would reduce drinking-related deaths by an average of 35 percent.
The authors, from the University of Florida, said their review found that doubling booze taxes — which presumably would substantially reduce consumption of alcohol — would lead to 11 percent fewer deaths overall in traffic crashes.
In addition, the authors concluded that the higher state levies would bring down sexually transmitted diseases by 6 percent, violence by 2 percent and crime by 1.4 percent. No statistically significant change was found, however, in rates of suicide.
Given that alcohol taxes differ from state to state, CNN reports, doubling the levies would increase the price of a six-pack of beer or bottle of wine from a few pennies to as much as 50 cents. A bottle of liquor, according to CNN, could cost a few more dollars.
To make the estimates, the researchers analyzed data from 50 previous studies on the link between alcohol taxes and drinking-related problems. They found that a 10 percent hike in alcohol prices leads to about a 5 percent drop in drinking, the Boston Globe reports.


