South Africans consume over five billion litres of alcohol per year, according to a study by the Medical Research Council (MRC).
Led by Dr Charles Parry, the MRC study conducted in conjunction with the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) and the University of Cape Town (UCT), revealed that in some communities as many as 30% of the male population and 10 – 15 % of the female population consume more than 30 litres of pure alcohol per year.
Advertisement
Although weekend drinking is particularly prevalent in South Africa, according to all the studies mentioned above, drinking is by no means restricted to the weekends.
If alcohol is abused in the community at large, the effects of this will be felt in the workplace.
According to the American Council for Drug Education:
Nearly 3 out of every 4 substance abusers are employed
They are five times more likely than other workers to injure themselves or co-workers and cause 40 percent of all industrial fatalities
They raise costs and reduce profits
They are also ten times more likely to miss work
They are five times more likely to file a worker’s compensation claim
They are 33% less productive.
Easy access and other contributing factors
Most South Africans have easy access to alcohol. South Africa boasts one liquor outlet (23 000 licensed and 200 000 unlicensed) for every 190 persons in South Africa, according to the MRC report. Other factors contributing to alcohol abuse in South Africa include:
Peer pressure
Communal drinking among adults
Availability, particularly in disadvantaged communities
The legacy of the “dop” system, particularly in the Western Cape
Ignorance
The falling price of certain alcohol products
Societal attitudes in general.
Alcohol abuse is particularly prevalent in certain professions, such as among sex workers, workers in the mine industry and workers in the fruit and wine industry, reports the MRC.
Although drinking is less prevalent among them, office workers are by no means excluded from these statistics.
Identifying Alcohol Abusers in the Workplace
It is not always easy to identify alcohol abusers in the workplace, but the American Council for Drug Education states that there are some clues that point to alcohol and possibly drug abuse:
Indifference to personal hygiene
Exhaustion, hyperactivity, slurred speech, an unsteady walk
Unexplained and frequent absences
Overreaction to real or imagined criticism
Irregular work patterns and low productivity
Intervening when someone at work is drinking
Many people don’t want to be the one who tells the boss that a co-worker is drinking. There are a few reasons why you should:
Unless managers know about the problem, they are unable to help by means of involving their employees in programmes that entail counselling and treatment
If you are covering up for your fellow-employees, you are protecting them from the consequences of their drinking. This can be to their detriment in the long term
You could be jeopardising your own safety or that of other workers.
Where to go for help
South African employers can get information on available treatment programmes for their employees from the South Africa National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependency (SANCA). SANCA provides mostly one-to-one counselling, and group sessions if requested by a particular company, says Mr Tertius Cronje, industrial consultant for SANCA.
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) has group meetings in many different locations – 72 just in the Western Cape. Individuals can attend these meetings voluntarily and anonymously. Phone the Helpline on 0861 435722 or send an e-mail to info@aanonymous.org.za for details about meetings in a particular region.
Bookmark with:
What are social bookmarks?