Expert Says Drinking Wine Isn’t As Good for You As You Think
Whenever anyone questions our
penchant for starting happy hour at 4 p.m., we throw them a little side eye and
say, “You know wine can help you live longer!” Well, it looks like we’re going
to have to retire that factoid: A new
meta-analysis Science speaks for a study that looks at dozens of
other studies) found that moderate drinkers don’t actually live longer than
those who stay sober.
“This study challenges a most uncomfortable finding of alcohol
research over the past decade—that moderate alcohol consumption reduces the
risk of cardiovascular disease,” says Marion Nestle, Ph.D., a nutrition
professor at NYU. “What surprises me is that it has taken this long to dig
deeply into the methods of those studies.”
The problems with the existing research stems from their
definition of drinkers and nondrinkers. Moderate drinking is usually defined as
an average of two drinks per night for men and one drink for women. (Females
get the short end of the stick because they tend to weigh less and alcohol has
been connected to an increased risk of breast cancer.) But many of the 87
peer-reviewed studies classified people who stopped drinking for medical
reasons as nondrinkers, making the drinkers look artificially healthier. When
researchers adjusted for this bias, the studies no longer showed that drinking
added years onto lushes’ lives.
But there's no need to pack up your
wine glasses for good. “Because drinking does not occur in isolation, many
individual, social, and cultural factors contribute to the way that alcohol
consumption relates to health consequences,” says Eun-Young Mun, Ph.D., a
psychology professor at the Center for Alcohol Studies at Rutgers University.
Translation: More research needs to be done before we even get close to saying
moderate drinking is something to avoid. So pour yourself a glass—just don’t
feel so high and mighty about it.
Expert Says Drinking Wine Isn’t As Good for You As You Think
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