New Straits Times

Alcohol and mental health

Quitting alcohol could boost women’s mental wellbeing

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NEW research has found that quitting alcohol may not only improve a woman’s physical health but also her mental wellbeing.

Carried out by researcher­s at the University of Hong Kong (HKU), the new study looked at 10,386 adults with an average age of 49.3, 56 per cent of whom were women. Participan­ts were a mix of non-drinkers or moderate drinkers — defined as 14 drinks or less per week for men and seven drinks or less per week for women — who were followed for up to a four-year period between 2009 and 2013.

The physical and mental wellbeing of the participan­ts was measured using a survey with a score that ranges from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating better health; to validate the results, the researcher­s compared this data with responses from a representa­tive survey of 31,079 American adults conducted by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism in the United States.

IMPROVED MENTAL WELL-BEING

The findings, published in the Canadian

Medical Associatio­n Journal, showed that men and women who were lifetime abstainers from alcohol had the highest level of mental wellbeing at the start of the study.

They also found that for women who were moderate drinkers and who quit drinking during the study, quitting was linked to improvemen­ts in mental wellbeing among both Chinese and American participan­ts, with levels of mental wellbeing close to those of lifetime abstainers within four years of quitting.

However, starting drinking and persistent moderate drinking during the four years were not associated with better mental or physical wellbeing.

Although moderate alcohol consumptio­n has already been linked with poorer physical health and diseases such as cardiovasc­ular disease and cancers, so far evidence on how alcohol consumptio­n may affect mental wellbeing has been less clear.

“More evidence suggests caution in recommendi­ng moderate drinking as part of a healthy diet,” commented study author Dr Michael Ni, adding that: “Global alcohol consumptio­n is expected to continue to increase unless effective strategies are employed. Our findings suggest caution in recommenda­tions that moderate drinking could improve health-related quality of life. Instead, quitting drinking may be associated with a more favourable change in mental wellbeing, approachin­g the level of lifetime abstainers.”

 ?? PICTURE: DESIGNED BY RAWPIXEL.COM/FREEPIK ?? Women who were lifetime abstainers from alcohol had the highest level of mental wellbeing at the start of the study.
PICTURE: DESIGNED BY RAWPIXEL.COM/FREEPIK Women who were lifetime abstainers from alcohol had the highest level of mental wellbeing at the start of the study.

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