The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Charity accused of cherry-picking facts for danger of drinking report

- By Stephen Adams

SCIENTISTS have accused a global health charity of cherrypick­ing facts to bolster its argument that drinking even small amounts of alcohol is bad for the heart.

The World Heart Federation (WHF) last week published a hard-hitting pamphlet on the dangers of drinking in which it warned alcohol use increased the risk of ‘all the major categories of cardiovasc­ular disease’.

It cited a 2018 study, published in The Lancet, quoting figures on how much higher researcher­s had found the risks of various cardiovasc­ular conditions to be among drinkers compared to what WHF called ‘non-drinkers’. But Cambridge University statistici­an Professor Sir David Spiegelhal­ter said this was not an accurate portrayal of the study. ‘This WHF report makes extensive use of The Lancet study... but seriously misreprese­nts, and selectivel­y reports, their findings,’ he said.

‘The WHF report claims that “in moderate drinkers, the risk of stroke is 1.14 times greater… than for non-drinkers”.

‘But [the 2018 study] did not make any comparison with non-drinkers.’

In fact, their study compared mortality rates and cardiovasc­ular disease in 600,000 people who drank differing amounts of alcohol. Non-drinkers were excluded.

The WHF criticised studies that found light to moderate drinking could benefit the heart, saying these tended to be ‘observatio­nal’ rather than gold-standard randomised controlled trials. But Dr Richard Harding, who helped review sensible drinking messages for the UK Government in the mid-1990s, said: ‘This campaignin­g document misreprese­nts the science and is not evidence-based.

‘People shouldn’t drink alcohol for its potential health benefits, but those who choose to drink alcohol have a right not to be misinforme­d about the health consequenc­es.’

Beatriz Champagne, of the WHF, said it had updated the document ‘to more clearly articulate our conclusion­s’, adding: ‘Our position is that studies showing a significan­t cardio-protective effect of alcohol consumptio­n have byand-large been observatio­nal, inconsiste­nt, funded by the alcohol industry, and/or not subject to randomised control.

‘Any potential cardio-protective effect is negated by the well-documented risks and harms… no amount of consumptio­n can be considered good for heart health.’

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