Stop ignoring the heavy drinking red flags

Binge Drinking Rife At Universities

South Africa has normalised heavy drinking and policy alone won’t change that – it has to be a cultural shift. Photo: File

Almost half of South Africans who consume alcohol drink too much. It’s a fact based on the number of drinkers who say they consume more than 15 drinks a week. This contributes to accidents, homicides and a range of medical conditions that place a heavy burden on our healthcare systems. 

The use of alcohol by teenagers is also worrying – with some studies showing that about 30% of teenage boys and 20% of teenage girls are binge drinkers.

The number of people dying from alcohol-related violence should set off national alarm bells. But it doesn’t. Alcohol is a factor in 60% of femicides, half of all homicides, two-fifths of rapes and a quarter of traffic fatalities caused by driver error.

Heavy drinking is so normalised in South African society that it has become part of our social fabric. We refuse to acknowledge the red flags, even as our communities and health systems come under immense strain. 

To change things, we need to build strong coalitions across communities, media, academia and government demanding policy reform and drive critical conversations about alcohol harms. 

A recent example of this is a new partnership between the Africa Centre for Inclusive Health Management (ACIHM) and DG Murray Trust (DGMT) to tackle heavy drinking. This collaboration aims to challenge the norms, policies and industry practices that promote and normalise heavy drinking. 

“South Africa is one of the heaviest drinking countries in the world, with those who drink tending to do so heavily, more than five drinks in one sitting. The health, social and economic costs and the burden on the country’s health system are severe,” says the centre’s director, Munya Saruchera.   

He says people don’t fully understand the health risks associated with drinking, such as Cancer and Foetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD). But even when children escape the direct effects of FASD, heavy drinking by parents, or other adults in the household, also affects children in the home. They may experience physical and emotional neglect, abuse, stress, trauma, conflict and insecurity. 

During adolescence, heavy and binge drinking can disrupt brain development in ways that extend far beyond the teenage years, leading to long-term cognitive deficits, difficulties with emotional regulation, and structural changes to the brain.   

Research underscores the urgent need for policy change, and policymakers can no longer turn a blind eye to the red flags. They must stop treating alcohol reform as optional. It is a public health emergency — one we can no longer afford to ignore. 

A Cape Town study led by researcher Samantha Filby, examined the effect of liquor trading hours in the Western Cape and found a strong correlation between late closing hours and spikes in hospital admissions, road accidents and interpersonal violence. The period between 2am and 4am was identified as especially dangerous.  

Measures such as raising alcohol prices are proven to curb excessive consumption. The ultimate goal is to drive policy reform at national, provincial and municipal levels, focusing on trading hours, licensing and restricting alcohol advertising.  

But legislative changes alone are not enough. South Africa needs a cultural shift, driven by public health messaging, in order to actively reduce consumption.  

We must normalise critical conversations about alcohol use from family dinner tables to parliamentary debates, much like the public health mobilisation that made talking about safe sex and young people’s agency a big part of the strategy to tackle HIV and Aids.  

Globally, the Sober Curious movement is reshaping drinking culture, but South Africa risks being left behind. In many rural and low-income areas, taverns and shebeens remain the only spaces for social connection. Without safe, community-driven alternatives, alcohol becomes the default form of recreation — particularly for unemployed youth. 

Civil society cannot wait for the government to act.   

Zimasa Mpemnyama is the Rethink Your Drink project lead at the DG Murray Trust.

la****@***co.za
Read More

Latest

Former Angels Top Prospect Jordyn Adams, 26, Commits To SMU Football

The 2018 wide receiver recruiting class was spearheaded by top prospects Amon-Ra St. Brown and Ja’Marr Chase. Both elite talents lived up to the immense hype and have since become All-Pro receivers in the NFL. Lost in that group was the player who sat between Brown and Chase in the rankings — a once highly-touted

College football rankings by returning production: Notre Dame ready for revenge tour

Returning production used to be one of the most important predictors of success in an upcoming college football season. Before the transfer portal ushered in a new era of player movement, replacing starters was a lot more difficult — and identifying which teams had the fewest holes to fill was a surefire why to identify which

What Is Actually Different This Season About Houston Football?

In just the second year under head coach Willie Fritz, Houston football finished with a 10-3 overall record, and the Cougars were one of the best teams in the Big 12 Conference. While the Cougars lost a lot of talent in the offseason, Houston reloaded through the transfer portal and 2026 recruiting class. Now, one

Martin Scorsese has officially joined the AI camp and it’s not what anyone expected

Martin Scorsese has partnered with AI startup Black Forest Labs to use generative AI for storyboarding Martin Scoresese Everett Collection / Shutterstock.com Hollywood’s complicated romance with artificial intelligence just got a whole lot more interesting. Martin Scorsese, the 83-year-old director behind Goodfellas, Raging Bull, and The Departed, has signed on as a partner and adviser

Newsletter

Don't miss

Former Angels Top Prospect Jordyn Adams, 26, Commits To SMU Football

The 2018 wide receiver recruiting class was spearheaded by top prospects Amon-Ra St. Brown and Ja’Marr Chase. Both elite talents lived up to the immense hype and have since become All-Pro receivers in the NFL. Lost in that group was the player who sat between Brown and Chase in the rankings — a once highly-touted

College football rankings by returning production: Notre Dame ready for revenge tour

Returning production used to be one of the most important predictors of success in an upcoming college football season. Before the transfer portal ushered in a new era of player movement, replacing starters was a lot more difficult — and identifying which teams had the fewest holes to fill was a surefire why to identify which

What Is Actually Different This Season About Houston Football?

In just the second year under head coach Willie Fritz, Houston football finished with a 10-3 overall record, and the Cougars were one of the best teams in the Big 12 Conference. While the Cougars lost a lot of talent in the offseason, Houston reloaded through the transfer portal and 2026 recruiting class. Now, one

Martin Scorsese has officially joined the AI camp and it’s not what anyone expected

Martin Scorsese has partnered with AI startup Black Forest Labs to use generative AI for storyboarding Martin Scoresese Everett Collection / Shutterstock.com Hollywood’s complicated romance with artificial intelligence just got a whole lot more interesting. Martin Scorsese, the 83-year-old director behind Goodfellas, Raging Bull, and The Departed, has signed on as a partner and adviser

Trump quietly signs a downsized AI executive order asking companies to voluntarily submit models for review 30 days before release

President Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday establishing a voluntary framework for government review of frontier AI models before public release, ending weeks of internal White House conflict over how aggressively to regulate the technology. The order, titled “Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security,” was signed privately without the usual livestream or public ceremony, a

Jury acquits 2 business executives of bribing Navy admiral for government contract

A federal jury has acquitted two business executives of charges that they conspired to bribe a retired four-star U.S. Navy admiral, who is now serving a six-year prison sentence for his conviction on corruption charges By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN Associated Press WASHINGTON -- A federal jury has acquitted two business executives of charges that they conspired

US Business Leaders Optimistic About China Cooperation, Emphasize Importance of Chinese Market

© 2026 China Money Network. All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer: The views, opinions, forecasts, and statements made by our hosts and guests are the personal views of those respective individuals and may or may not be either endorsed or accepted by China Money Network Limited or the companies with which these individuals are employed.

Tesla’s Business Has Become Much More Diversified in Just the Past Five Years. Does That Make Its Stock a Better Buy Today?

Key Points Tesla's energy generation and storage segment generated 27% revenue growth last year. The company's non-automotive segments were able to help offset a double-digit decline in auto revenue in 2025. These 10 stocks could mint the next wave of millionaires › Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) is known for its electric vehicles (EVs), and while they