What Doctors Don’t Tell You Australia-NZ – July 22, 2019

(Darren Dugan) #1

Why we’re told alcohol is more


dangerous than it really is


A glass or two of alcohol can help us live longer when we reach the


age of 65—but it can take years off the lives of younger drinkers, say


researchers, who think this explains the contradictory health advice


we’ve been getting about drinking.


More than a third of all deaths from alcoholism happen to people


between 20 and 49 years old—and so when medical researchers


recruit older people for their studies, the ‘problem drinkers’ may


already have died.


As a result, modest drinking becomes a health benefit in people over


65, and accounts for half the lives that are ‘saved’ through drinking,


such as from improved heart health. Less than 15 percent of lives lost


through excessive alcohol drinking occur in this age group.


So, despite the dire warnings from our health guardians that even


one sip of alcohol can send us to an early grave, modest drinking


comes with a “relatively low risk,” say researchers from the Boston


Medical Center, especially as we get older.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs, 2019; 80: 63–


UPFRONT

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