Scottish Daily Mail

Daily drink protects heart and reduces risk of an early death

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

DRINKING a glass of wine or a bottle of beer a night could slash your risk of an early death by a fifth.

Moderate drinking – defined as up to seven drinks a week for women and 14 for men – significan­tly cuts the risk of dying from heart disease and other problems, a study has found.

The research, conducted among more than 300,000 Americans, directly contradict­s official guidance published by the British chief medical officer.

Dame Sally Davies has stated there is ‘no safe level’ of drinking.

But while some evidence suggests drinking any amount may increase the risk of certain cancers, experts last night said the benefits to the heart ‘clearly outweigh’ these risks, particular­ly among the elderly.

Scientists from the University of Texas and Shandong University in China tracked 333,247 Americans for an average of 8.2 years.

They defined a ‘moderate’ drinker as a woman who drank up to seven ‘standard’ drinks a week – equivalent to a 140ml glass of 12 per cent-strength wine or a 340ml bottle of 5 per cent beer – and a man who consumed 14 drinks.

Moderate drinkers were 22 per cent less likely to die over the study period than those abstaining from alcohol all their lives.

Moderate alcohol consumptio­n seemed to be particular­ly protective of the heart, with deaths from cardiovasc­ular disease slashed by 29 per cent. Researcher­s stressed there was a ‘delicate balance’ between the benefits and dangers of alcohol, and if people regularly consumed too much, drinking could rapidly switch from benefiting health to damaging it.

Those who consumed more than the ‘moderate’ threshold were 11 per cent more likely to die than lifelong teetotalle­rs.

The study was published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom