Binge drinking was responsible for more than half of the estimated 79,000 deaths  and two thirds of the estimated 2.3 million years of potential life lost as a  result of excessive drinking each year in the United States during 2001--2005. 
CDC analyzed data from the 2009 Behavioral Risk Factor  Surveillance System (BRFSS) on the prevalence of binge drinking (defined as  consuming four or more alcoholic drinks per occasion for women and five or more  for men during the past 30 days) among U.S. adults aged ≥18 years who responded  to the BRFSS survey by landline or cellular telephone. 
Data also were analyzed  from the 2009 National Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) on the prevalence of  current alcohol use (consuming at least one alcoholic drink during the 30 days  before the survey), and binge drinking (consuming five or more alcoholic drinks  within a couple of hours during the 30 days before the survey) among U.S. high  school students, and on the prevalence of binge drinking among high school  students who reported current alcohol use. 
Among U.S. adults, the prevalence of reported binge drinking  was 15.2% among landline respondents. Binge drinking was more common among men  (20.7%), persons aged 18--24 years (25.6%) and 25−34 years (22.5%), whites  (16.0%), and persons with annual household incomes of $75,000 or more (19.3%). 
 Among cellular telephone respondents, the overall prevalence of binge drinking  (20.6%) was higher than among landline respondents, although the demographic  patterns of binge drinking were similar. 
Prevalence among high school students  was 41.8% for current alcohol use, 24.2% for binge drinking, and 60.9% for binge  drinking among students who reported current alcohol use.
Binge drinking is common among U.S. adults, particularly  those with higher household incomes, and among high school students. Binge  drinking estimates for adults were higher in the cellular telephone sample than  in the landline sample. Most youths who reported current alcohol use also  reported binge drinking. 

 
