Home / Full timeline / Members attending the annual convention of the National Black Alcoholism Council, Inc. (NBAC) in Atlanta, Georgia, declared that alcoholism was a serious threat to the continued welfare of black America.
Members attending the annual convention of the National Black Alcoholism Council, Inc. (NBAC) in Atlanta, Georgia, declared that alcoholism was a serious threat to the continued welfare of black America.
1987 (Sep 24)
Members attending the annual convention of the National Black Alcoholism Council, Inc. (NBAC) in Atlanta, Georgia, declared that alcoholism was a serious threat to the continued welfare of Black America. Although figures varied, it was estimated that between ten million and twenty-four million Americans were alcoholics in 1987. However, a recent government study showed that Blacks were twice as likely to die from cirrhosis than Whites and that esophageal cancer among Blacks was ten times higher than among Whites. Maxine Womble, chairwoman of the nine-year-old NBAC, said that the impact of alcoholism among Blacks could be seen in "the large number of single-parent households, the prevalence of poverty, youth gangs, violence," high dropout rates from schools, teenage pregnancies, and "Black-on-Black crime.” Some studies, for example, suggested that alcohol and drugs were involved in between 50 percent and 70 percent of the Black homicides in the United States. "A lot of what we're doing is about images and education,” Mrs. Womble said. “People in these [Black] communities must realize only they can save themselves.”
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.