Reinforcing the Point that Moderate Alcohol Use Does Not Add to Life Expectancy

It is now understood that the past studies indicating that low levels of alcohol use were protective and modestly extended life were flawed. This has been the case for a few years now; the research noted here is just hammering home that point in a more robust way. The fundamental problem is that people can stop drinking for health reasons, and thus the cohort of abstainers tends to contain more sick individuals with a higher mortality risk than is the case for the moderate intake cohort. Problems of this nature, simple in hindsight but essentially ignored for years, bedevil many areas of epidemiological study. There were very similar issues in studies indicating a protective effect for being moderately overweight in later life, for example.

Studies linking moderate drinking to health benefits suffer from fundamental design flaws. The major issue: Those studies have generally focused on older adults and failed to account for people's lifetime drinking habits. So moderate drinkers were compared with "abstainer" and "occasional drinker" groups that included some older adults who had quit or cut down on drinking because they'd developed any number of health conditions. That makes people who continue to drink look much healthier by comparison. And in this case, he noted, looks are deceiving.

For the analysis, researchers identified 107 published studies that followed people over time and looked at the relationship between drinking habits and longevity. When the researchers combined all the data, it looked like light to moderate drinkers (that is, those who drank between one drink per week and two per day) had a 14% lower risk of dying during the study period compared with abstainers.

Things changed, however, when the investigators did a deeper dive. There were a handful of "higher quality" studies that included people who were relatively young at the outset (younger than 55, on average) and that made sure former and occasional drinkers were not considered "abstainers." In those studies, moderate drinking was not linked to a longer life. Instead, it was the "lower quality" studies (older participants, no distinction between former drinkers and lifelong abstainers) that did link moderate drinking to greater longevity.

Link: https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1051741

Comments

I think this is all bunk. There have been several studies that included people who never drank alcohol and were not former drinkers who were considered "abstainers".

In those studies having one or two drinks a day did show a positive benefit. Even now, some of the longest-lived when asked about their eating and drinking habits say they have a cocktail or two daily.

This is just another case of the corrupt medical cartel and others steering people in the wrong direction. Between big pharma, who are the real drug dealers and the the USDA with its BS food pyramid, is it any wonder why the US is such a sick and growing sicker by the day nation?

With obesity becoming the norm, life expectancy declining and all the problems people are facing today, having that drink or two to reduce stress levels shouldn't be a problem.

The bottom line is to get out of life what you can as it will be over sooner than you think and there are bigger things to worry about than that glass of wine or beer you enjoy each day. Cheers!

Posted by: Jim Gilly at August 3rd, 2024 8:08 PM

The above referenced study is little more than propaganda from an anti-alcohol organization. Not only are there prospective studies showing health benefits from moderate wine consumption, but also evidence that nondrinkers who start have improved markers of health and that moderate drinkers who quit fare worse. The entire argument is based on inaccurate parsing of the nondrinker cohort. Further, the analysis oversimplifies the question by failing to consider patterns of drinking and type of beverage; most studies demonstrate that wine in moderation with meals is distinctly different than equivalent amounts of alcohol from other sources consumed in less regular patterns. What I find most disappointing in reporting on these types of studies is how the conclusions are repeated without considering potential bias on the part of the study authors.

Posted by: Richard at August 7th, 2024 6:36 PM

US is a country where supplement suppliers make lyophilized californian wine in capsules. It should be studied one day in comparison with wine and other alcohols too...

Posted by: SilverSeeker at August 8th, 2024 7:23 AM
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