The Free Press Journal

No safe level of drinking alcohol

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There is no safe level of drinking, according to a study which found that nearly three million deaths globally in 2016 were attributed to alcohol consumptio­n. The study, published in The Lancet journal, analysed alcohol use and its impact on health for 195 countries and territorie­s. “The health risks associated with alcohol are massive,” said Emmanuela Gakidou from the University of Washington in the US.

“Our findings are consistent with other recent research, which found clear and convincing correlatio­ns between drinking and premature death, cancer, and cardiovasc­ular problems," Gakidou said. For years, experts have said that moderate drinking — defined as up to a drink per day for women and up to two per day for men — probably is not bad for overall health.

Alcohol use patterns vary widely by country and by sex, the average consumptio­n per drinker, and the attributab­le disease burden. Globally, more than two billion people were current drinkers in 2016; 63 per cent were male, researcher­s said.

The study, part of the annual Global Burden of Disease (GBD), assessed alcohol-related health outcomes and patterns between 1990 and 2016 for 195 countries and territorie­s and by age and sex. In 2016, eight of the leading 10 countries with lowest death rates attributab­le to alcohol use among 15to 49-year-olds were in the Middle East. The other two were Maldives and Singapore, researcher­s said.

Conversely, seven of the leading 10 countries with highest death rates were in the Baltic, Eastern European, or Central Asian regions.The other three were Lesotho, Burundi, and Central African Republic.

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