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The alcohol crisis is quietly hitting high-stress, “high-status” workers

What The Pitt can teach us about addiction.



Alcohol consumption in the United States has fallen to historic lows—a welcome development for public health. A 2024 CDC study linked alcohol to more than 175,000 deaths annually, so any downward trend deserves recognition.

Yet beneath this encouraging headline lies a more complicated reality. While overall rates decline, certain groups continue to face disproportionately high rates of alcohol misuse. Lower-income populations often experience the most severe consequences, but alcohol dependency also persists among professions society considers "high status"—lawyers, journalists, and especially doctors and nurses.

 A Growing Concern in Healthcare

A 2023 global meta-analysis revealed that one in five healthcare professionals drinks at levels hazardous to their health, with frequent binge drinking. These rates climbed during the pandemic, moving in the opposite direction of the general population's decline. Among U.S. physicians specifically, a 2015 study found that 13% of male doctors and 21% of female doctors met criteria for alcohol misuse.

The stakes extend beyond individual health. Alcohol misuse among providers correlates with poorer work performance and worse patient outcomes, raising concerns not only for the person struggling with dependency but for everyone under their care.

The pandemic's trauma continues to echo through hospital corridors. Medical work remains intensely stressful, and the temptation to use substances as a coping mechanism is real and persistent.

Progress—and Persistent Barriers

Society has made meaningful strides in reframing addiction: no longer viewed primarily as a moral failing, but as a complex interplay of physiology, dependency, and life circumstances. Yet "high-status" workers present unique challenges. Persistent stereotypes about who experiences addiction can mask risky drinking patterns. These professionals may be less receptive to interventions. And if they do seek treatment, returning to work can bring stigma from colleagues—or, for physicians, erosion of patient trust.

This tension has been on my mind while watching *The Pitt*, HBO's acclaimed drama set in a city emergency department. Its current season centers on a doctor attempting to return to practice after substance use treatment—a storyline that captures both how far we've come and how far we still have to go.

 What *The Pitt* Gets Right

At the end of Season 1, viewers learn that Dr. Frank Langdon has been diverting hospital medications for personal use. The revelation is jarring: until that moment, Langdon appeared as the steady, reliable mentor to the show's younger residents. Nobody suspected a problem because he seemed to perform flawlessly.

That's the show's first crucial insight: someone can excel professionally while privately battling addiction. In medicine—where competence is paramount and vulnerability is often concealed—identifying the problem becomes especially difficult. Many providers believe they can maintain high standards despite misusing substances.

"It is very difficult to treat a physician. Physicians just, in general, have a lot of ego," says Dr. Jason Kirby, chief medical officer at Recovery Centers of America. "A lot of the treatment of anybody with substance use disorders, you have to break down that cognitive distortion. You break down that ego. And it can be very difficult for physicians to get to that point."

Kirby notes that most doctors enter rehab only after a colleague, supervisor, or patient raises concerns—not through self-referral. The issue must often become unavoidable before help is sought.

Season 2 finds Langdon back in the ER after treatment. He appears humbled, offering apologies to coworkers. Here again, the show avoids easy answers. Some colleagues, like Dr. Cassie McKay—who navigated her own alcohol treatment before the series began—extend support. Others, including his former mentor Dr. Robby and colleague Trinity Santos, remain wary. They question his sincerity, fear relapse, and worry about patient safety.

I haven't seen the finale yet, but one central question remains: Can Langdon fully reclaim his place, or will the weight of broken trust prove too heavy? If he stumbles, or if colleagues cannot forgive, the outcome will hurt—but it will ring true. Still, I hope for reconciliation. That's the recovery story we root for, and the one we should strive to create in reality.

 Bridging Fiction and Real-World Solutions

We're moving toward a future where doctors like Langdon receive help and return to work with support. But we aren't there yet.

The encouraging news: treatment has advanced and standardized. Evidence-based interventions exist for a range of substances. For physicians specifically, most states operate dedicated recovery programs. Kirby notes these achieve roughly 95% success rates—higher than typical programs—because they are more intensive and longer-lasting.

Cultural attitudes have also evolved. More people recognize substance misuse as a medical condition requiring treatment. Yet stigma endures, especially for high-performing professionals. Doctors often enter treatment with more severe dependency because they've hidden their struggles and delayed seeking help, fearing professional repercussions. And when they return, they re-enter the very environment that contributed to their risky behavior.

"It could be very difficult for physicians to return to work," Kirby says. "They're going back into the environment that could have made them sick in the first place, or at least aided in that process."

That may be the largest remaining challenge: addressing the conditions that drive substance misuse in the first place.

The pandemic highlighted medicine's intense demands and left many providers with lasting trauma. But new stressors emerge daily in settings where life-and-death decisions are routine. Compounding this, the U.S. faces shortages of both doctors and nurses. Many providers feel overworked, with insufficient institutional support for mental health.

"Knowing the trauma that physicians and nurses and everybody who works in the field face every day, there needs to be healthy outlets for that," Kirby says. "When folks don't have the healthy outlets, unfortunately, they're going to turn to unhealthy outlets."

*The Pitt* deserves credit for spotlighting a topic long shrouded in silence. But its impact depends on whether we apply its lessons beyond the screen.

Alcohol use disorder isn't defined by a specific quantity consumed. Experts emphasize subtler indicators: Have you tried to cut down but couldn't? Do you experience cravings? Do you feel drinking interferes with your life?

These signs can be easy to overlook—visible perhaps only to a trusted colleague or loved one.

If you recognize these warning signs in yourself or someone you know, please reach out for help. That's where every recovery story begins—for doctors, for healthcare workers, and for anyone navigating the complex path toward healing.