Ambulance attendances
Data on alcohol and other drug-related ambulance attendances are sourced from the National Ambulance Surveillance System for Alcohol and Other Drug Misuse and Overdose.The highest number and rate of ambulance attendances continues to be alcohol intoxication-related (tables 12 and S2.81).
In 2020, for alcohol intoxication-related ambulance attendances:
- Rates of attendances ranged from 143.3 per 100,000 population in New South Wales to 198.9 per 100,000 population in Queensland.
- The majority of attendances were for males, ranging from 57% of attendances in the Australian Capital Territory to 62% in New South Wales.
- The median age of patients for alcohol intoxication-related attendances ranged from 38 years in Tasmania to 43 years in New South Wales (Table S2.81).
The characteristics of alcohol intoxication-related ambulance attendances varied by region. In 2020:
- Higher rates of attendances were reported in regional areas than in metropolitan areas in New South Wales (157.1 per 100,000 population and 136.4, respectively), Victoria (182.4 per 100,000 population and 145.5, respectively) and Queensland (237.3 per 100,000 population and 154.8, respectively).
- In contrast, Tasmania reported higher metropolitan rates of attendance (201.7 per 100,000 population metropolitan and 96.9 in regional areas).
- Similar proportions of alcohol intoxication-related attendances were transported to hospital in metropolitan and regional areas for New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland, ranging from 79% to 83% of attendances.
- In Tasmania, more metropolitan attendances were transported to hospital than in regional areas (81% and 74%, respectively).
- The Australian Capital Territory (metropolitan only) reported that 70% of alcohol intoxication-related attendances were transported to hospital (Table S2.81).
Drug-related hospitalisations are defined as hospitalisations with a principal diagnosis relating to a substance use disorder or direct harm relating to use of selected substances (AIHW 2018).
AIHW analysis of the National Hospital Morbidity Database showed that alcohol accounted for over 1 in 2 (53%) drug-related hospitalisations in 2019–20 (Table S1.8a). Alcohol has remained the most common drug recorded in drug-related hospitalisations across the 5 years to 2019–20.
The number and rate of alcohol-related hospitalisations increased between 2015–16 (68,236 hospitalisations, or 284.5 per 100,00 population) and 2018–19 (75,765, or 301 per 100,000), then declined in 2019–20 (74,511, or 291.5 per 100,000) (Table S1.8b).
In 2019–20, almost 3 in 4 (71%) alcohol-related hospitalisations occurred in Major cities. Previous analysis by the AIHW indicates that the relative proportions of hospitalisations by drug type were different in each remoteness area with a higher proportion of drug-related hospitalisations for alcohol (as opposed to other drugs) in Remote and very remote areas of Australia than in Major cities and Regional areas (AIHW 2019). In 2019–20, there were 696.7 alcohol-related hospitalisations per 100,000 population in Remote and very remote areas (3,419 hospitalisations) (Table S1.8c).
Alcohol-induced deaths are defined as those that can be directly attributable to alcohol use (that is, where an alcohol-related condition is recorded as the underlying cause of death), as determined by toxicology and pathology reports (for example, alcoholic liver cirrhosis or alcohol poisoning). Alcohol-related deaths include deaths directly attributable to alcohol use and deaths where alcohol was listed as an associated cause of death (for example a motor vehicle accident where a person recorded a high blood alcohol concentration) (ABS 2018a). See also Health impacts: Deaths due to harmful alcohol consumption.
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) analysis of the AIHW National Mortality Database showed that of the 1,452 alcohol-induced deaths registered in 2020:
- The highest age-specific rates were for older people—16.0 per 100,000 population for those aged 60–64 years; 13.2 for those 55–59; and 12.3 for those aged 50–54. This compares with age-specific rates of 0.3 (or less) per 100,000 population for people aged 29 and under (Table S1.1e).
- The majority (73%, or 1,056 deaths) were recorded for males (Table S1.1f).
The most common cause of alcohol-induced death in 2020 was liver disease, followed by mental and behavioural disorders due to psychoactive substance use. Mental and behavioural conditions due to psychoactive substance use was also the most common contributor to alcohol-related deaths (Table S1.1f).
In 2020, ABS Causes of Death reported:
- The alcohol-induced death rate for males was 2.8 times higher than females (age-standardised rate of 7.7 per 100,000 population for males, compared with 2.8 deaths per 100,000 population for females).
- For both males and females, the highest age-specific death rate was in those aged 55–64 years (22.4 per 100,000 population for males and 7.1 per 100,000 for females (ABS 2021).
Treatment
The 2020–21 Alcohol and Other Drug Treatment Services National Minimum Data Set (AODTS NMDS) Early Insights report shows that alcohol was the principal drug of concern in 37% of treatment episodes provided for clients’ own drug use (AIHW 2022a).
This was a similar proportion to 2019–20 (34% of closed treatment episodes) (AIHW 2021a).
Data collected for the AODTS NMDS are released twice each year—an Early Insights report in April and a detailed report mid year. Detailed information about treatment episodes for alcohol will be updated in July 2022.
The Alcohol and Other Drug Treatment Services National Minimum Data Set (AODTS NMDS) provides information on treatment provided to clients by publicly funded AOD treatment services, including government and non-government organisations. Data from the AODTS NMDS show that alcohol is the most common principal drug of concern among clients seeking treatment for their own drug use (AIHW 2021a). In 2019–20, over 1 in 3 (34%) closed treatment episodes were for alcohol—a similar proportion to 2018–19 (36% of episodes) (Table S2.76; Figure ALCOHOL7).
In 2019–20, where alcohol was the principal drug of concern:
- Around two-thirds (65%) of clients were male and over 1 in 6 (18%) were Indigenous Australians (tables S2.77 and S2.78; Figure ALCOHOL7).
- Around half (51%) of clients were aged 30–49 with 26% of clients aged 40–49 and 25% aged 30–39.
- The most common source of referral was self or family (42% of closed treatment episodes), followed by a health service (41%) (Table S2.79).
- The most common main treatment type was counselling (38% of closed treatment episodes), followed by assessment only (18%) and withdrawal management (14%) (Figure ALCOHOL7). These 3 main treatment types have remained the most common over the 10-year period to 2019–20.
- The median treatment duration of closed treatment episodes for alcohol was just under 4 weeks (26 days) (AIHW 2021a).

Source: AIHW Alcohol and Other Drug Treatment Services National Minimum Data Set (AODTS NMDS).
Supplementary tables S2.76, S2.78 and S2.80.
View data tables >
Where the principal drug of concern was alcohol, the proportion of clients who travelled 1 hour or longer to treatment services in 2016–17 was higher in Regional and remote areas than in Major cities (29% compared with 7%) (AIHW 2019).