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posted by n1 on Thursday August 28 2014, @06:44PM   Printer-friendly
from the starting-the-weekend-early dept.

An article by Stanton Peele makes the case that there is strong evidence that reasonable levels of drinking are healthy, and if fact beneficial to your health compared with abstinence.

For all levels of drinking, including the highest one, for both men and women, death rates did not reach those for abstainers.

[...] Of course, abstainers may not drink because they are already ill. Thus the meta-analysis relied on studies that eliminated subjects who are abstaining due to illness, or else contrast drinkers with lifetime abstainers.

There isn't a list of references in the article, but this study may be one of the supporting ones: Alcohol Dosing and Total Mortality in Men and Women: An Updated Meta-analysis of 34 Prospective Studies.

There are, no doubt, reasonable criticisms that can be made, but there does seem to be a case for saying that drinking some alcohol is beneficial.

Article also published in: Pacific Standard Magazine

 
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  • (Score: 1) by unitron on Friday August 29 2014, @01:22AM

    by unitron (70) on Friday August 29 2014, @01:22AM (#87004) Journal

    ...healthy nor unhealthy.

    Drinking has no health.

    The question is whether or not it is healthful for those who drink.

    --
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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 29 2014, @08:48AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 29 2014, @08:48AM (#87097)

    Found here: [vocabulary.com]
    But according to the Oxford English Dictionary, healthy has been a synonym for healthful since its earliest appearance in print... in 1552.