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UK reviewing alcohol intake guidelines

Health officials are to review the government’s drinking guidelines, as research linking moderate drinking to cancer leads to increased pressure from medics.

“One unit a day or less than one unit a day is associated with an increased risk” (Photo: Wiki)

The government’s official drinking recommendation, in place since 1995, states that men should limit themselves to no more than 28 units of alcohol per week, and women should consume no more than 21. Typically, a pint of lager or a medium-sized glass of wine has around two units.

But now the Department of Health has revealed the chief medical officer is reviewing the recommended drinking limit, and new guidelines are expected to be published later this year, according to reports.

The limit faces being cut dramatically as doctors and health charities cite what they claim to be mounting evidence apparently showing the damage caused by even moderate drinking.

Katherine Brown, director of the Institute of Alcohol Studies, told The Daily Mirror that the UK will follow the lead of other countries and cut its limit. She said, “Both Canada and Australia reviewed their drinking guidelines recently and, based on the latest available evidence, set lower limits for regular alcohol consumption than the current UK weekly guidelines.

“This would suggest there is good reason to revise the UK guidelines downwards,” she said.

Hinting that the government could recommend that people cut out drinking altogether, Brown continued, “The World Health Organisation advises there is no safe level of drinking for cancer prevention so we would expect our guidelines to include this information so that consumers are able to make informed decisions about their drinking.”

Dr Kieran Moriarty, a consultant gastroenterologist and spokesman on alcohol for the British Society for Gastroenterology said recent findings involving a set of twins engaging in a four-week drinking experiment were a “game changer”.

The experiment was featured on a recent BBC programme, and showed one twin drinking the recommended 28 units per week spread out over all seven days, and the other twin drinking all 28 units in one day, once a week.

The consultant leading the experiment said that both men showed strong signs of ill-health and organ inflammation, not just the binge-drinking twin.

Dr Moriarty warned, “One unit a day or less than one unit a day is associated with an increased risk and the cancer that is seen as the most sensitive is breast cancer.”

He continued, “Alcohol is associated with cancers elsewhere and there is generally no safe level… I’m pretty sure the sensible limits will be scaled down.”

One response to “UK reviewing alcohol intake guidelines”

  1. It should be noted that both the Canadian and Australian guidelines are entirely in line with current UK guidelines. The Australian recommendations are 20g a day for both men and women and no more than 40g on occasions. With the Canadian guidelines Women are advised not to drink more than two drinks a day ( of 14g against our 8g ‘unit’ over here) and up to a maximum of 10 drinks a week (140g a week) and men no more than three drinks a day (that’s 42g a day, much higher than the UK maximum of 32g), up to a maximum of 15 drinks a week. The UK guidelines reflect the current evidence base of the J shaped curve well, with reduced mortality among moderate drinkers of 10 – 20g among women and 30g among men. the risk of most disease and mortality begin to increase and espeically cancers at consumption of above 30g a day.It ahs taken a huge amount of effort and resource to make consumers more aware of units and guidelines.

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