Alcohol and health
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Overtired and emotional
- Taylor’s LBV
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Re: Alcohol and health
I just Googled it....... http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1 ... 78,1413917
I was twenty years out, but the report was even better than I recalled.
I was twenty years out, but the report was even better than I recalled.
It may be drivel, but it's not meaningless.
Re: Alcohol and health
Not even a bottle a week.The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/8463333.stm]Scots 'drink 46 bottles of vodka'[/url], wrote:Adults in Scotland are drinking the equivalent of 46 bottles of vodka each in a year, a study has suggested.
The research was based on industry sales data analysed by NHS Health Scotland.
It said sales for the year to September 2009 averaged 12.2 litres of pure alcohol per person over the age of 18.
The Scottish government said the figure, which had remained static since 2005, was the equivalent of 537 pints or 130 bottles of wine per person.
The new figures come as the Scottish government pushes for a minimum price for alcohol to tackle the country's drink-related problems.
In total, 50.5 million litres of pure alcohol were sold in Scotland last year, enough for every drinker over the age of 18 to exceed the weekly consumption guidelines.
Re: Alcohol and health
Some of us no longer live in the homeland so are excluded from the statistics.jdaw1 wrote:Not even a bottle a week.The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/8463333.stm]Scots 'drink 46 bottles of vodka'[/url], wrote:Adults in Scotland are drinking the equivalent of 46 bottles of vodka each in a year
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
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Glenn E.
- Cálem Quinta da Foz 1970
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Re: Alcohol and health
Something about this study seems suspicious to me.jdaw1 wrote:The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/8463333.stm]Scots 'drink 46 bottles of vodka'[/url], wrote:Adults in Scotland are drinking the equivalent of 46 bottles of vodka each in a year, a study has suggested.
Glenn Elliott
Re: Alcohol and health
When I was in my teens growing up in Scotland my cousin and I used to be "barmen" at family parties. We had a large family so there would frequently be gatherings of 50 or more at someone's house for a booze-up. Strange as it may seem, there was probably twice as much Vodka than Whisky drunk at those events.Glenn E. wrote:Something about this study seems suspicious to me.jdaw1 wrote:The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/8463333.stm]Scots 'drink 46 bottles of vodka'[/url], wrote:Adults in Scotland are drinking the equivalent of 46 bottles of vodka each in a year, a study has suggested.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
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Glenn E.
- Cálem Quinta da Foz 1970
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Re: Alcohol and health
I'm surprised that's not a crime in Scotland!DRT wrote:When I was in my teens growing up in Scotland my cousin and I used to be "barmen" at family parties. We had a large family so there would frequently be gatherings of 50 or more at someone's house for a booze-up. Strange as it may seem, there was probably twice as much Vodka than Whisky drunk at those events.Glenn E. wrote:Something about this study seems suspicious to me.jdaw1 wrote:The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/8463333.stm]Scots 'drink 46 bottles of vodka'[/url], wrote:Adults in Scotland are drinking the equivalent of 46 bottles of vodka each in a year, a study has suggested.
Glenn Elliott
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Re: Alcohol and health
That's be because the Whisky is all exported to the countries where they make Vodka - such is the perversity of international trade.DRT wrote:When I was in my teens growing up in Scotland my cousin and I used to be "barmen" at family parties. We had a large family so there would frequently be gatherings of 50 or more at someone's house for a booze-up. Strange as it may seem, there was probably twice as much Vodka than Whisky drunk at those events.Glenn E. wrote:Something about this study seems suspicious to me.jdaw1 wrote:The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/8463333.stm]Scots 'drink 46 bottles of vodka'[/url], wrote:Adults in Scotland are drinking the equivalent of 46 bottles of vodka each in a year, a study has suggested.
Top 2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
2026: DR Very Old White, Graham Stone Terraces 2011, Quevedo Branco 1986 b.2026
Re: Alcohol and health
The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8555461.stm]Women who drink wine 'less likely to gain weight'[/url], wrote:Women can enjoy a tipple and stay slim, according to a study that shows moderate drinkers gain less weight than teetotallers.
Women who drank red wine gained the least, but the results held for other wines, beers and spirits.
Although alcohol contains calories, the US researchers believe the women may have substituted it for other food.
Their work in the Archives of Internal Medicine followed over 19,000 women over 13 years.
The women recruited into the study were aged 39 or over and of normal weight at the time they joined.
Over the next 13 years, on average, they gained weight progressively.
Those who drank no alcohol gained the most weight, and there was an inverse relationship between weight gain and alcohol consumption.
Even after accounting for lifestyle, dietary factors and things like smoking and exercise, the study found those who drank the least gained the most weight.
Moderate drinking was classed as drinking up to about two 150ml glasses of wine a day.
Although the study did not include men, the authors believe the findings may not apply to men.
The women in the study who drank appeared to substitute alcohol for other food, meaning their overall calorie intake did not go up that much.
They say men who drink might not do this.
Also the way men and women break down alcohol in their liver may differ, which help might explain why women do not pile on the pounds.
But British researchers cautioned that people should be wary of concluding they can shed pounds by drinking more.
Catherine Collins, dietician and spokesperson for the British Dietetic Association, said: "It would be a mistake to think that drinking alcohol helps you lose weight."
She rejected the notion that the calories in alcohol don't contribute to weight gain.
"We know that alcohol calories do count. For binge drinkers, for example, alcohol can have a major impact on weight."
She pointed out that the study was based on women who were normal weight when they were recruited.
"These are quite an unusual group, who were likely to be mindful of keeping their body healthy," she said.
"Most women would have gained a few extra pounds by the age of 39.
"To be of normal weight by that age is quite a feat in itself.
"So findings about weight gain among this group may not be translate to others."
She said another limitation of the research was that it did not report how much snack food the participants ate.
"It may be that those who had wine as their treat ate less chocolate and snacks," she said.
Re: Alcohol and health
The BBC, in an article entitled [url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8562231.stm]Obese drinkers face liver 'double whammy'[/url], wrote:Drinkers who are overweight face a "double whammy" impact on their liver, research suggests.
Two studies of more than a million UK men and women suggest excess weight and alcohol act together to raise the risk of cirrhosis and other liver diseases.
Obese women who drink little more than a glass of wine a day have almost double the risk of liver disease than other women, the researchers said.
A similar effect is seen in men, the British Medical Journal reported.
The authors of the research said "safe" alcohol limits for the overweight may need to be redefined.
Rates of liver disease and obesity are increasing in the UK.
Alcohol is a major cause of liver cirrhosis and there is mounting evidence that excess weight also plays a role.
In the first study, researchers at the University of Oxford studied more than a million middle-aged women in England and Wales.
They found that being overweight or obese increased the likelihood of developing liver cirrhosis.
Dr Bette Liu of Oxford's Cancer Epidemiology Unit said: "We estimate that almost 20% of liver cirrhosis in middle-aged UK women is due to excess weight, while almost 50% is due to alcohol consumption."
The second study followed more than 9,000 men in Scotland.
Obese men who said they drank 15 or more units a week had the greatest risk of liver disease; almost 19 times higher than those who were slim.
Writing in the BMJ, the authors said their findings have important health implications.
They said lower body mass index (BMI) specific "safe" limits of alcohol consumption may need to be defined.
Lead author Dr Carole Hart of the University of Glasgow said: "Further research might show that there could be different limits more applicable to overweight and obese people."
Alison Rogers of the British Liver Trust said the data showed a "double whammy effect" where two causes of liver disease both impact on a person's liver together, and the impact is greater than the sum of the parts.
The Department of Health said liver disease was a growing problem and they were developing a national strategy to manage it.
A spokesperson said: "Prevention is always better than cure and our public health campaigns on drinking and obesity reflects this."
Re: Alcohol and health
A proposed by-law for a minimum price to buy alcohol.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-ma ... r-10846702
It seems to be targeted at those who buy super strength cider and lager; 9% for 500ml will see a min price of £2.25. For the rest of us it'll make little difference (£4.50 for a bottle of wine, £1 for a can of 5% beer (and £7.50 for a bottle port).
Will it work? I fear that the destitute who depend on alcohol will switch to something far worse. Young drinkers will probably find a way of absorbing the cost. With regards to preventing drunken behaviour and improving people's health, to me it seems like a weak measure.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-ma ... r-10846702
It seems to be targeted at those who buy super strength cider and lager; 9% for 500ml will see a min price of £2.25. For the rest of us it'll make little difference (£4.50 for a bottle of wine, £1 for a can of 5% beer (and £7.50 for a bottle port).
Will it work? I fear that the destitute who depend on alcohol will switch to something far worse. Young drinkers will probably find a way of absorbing the cost. With regards to preventing drunken behaviour and improving people's health, to me it seems like a weak measure.
Mark
Re: Alcohol and health
The NHS has made a Drinks tracker for iPhone. Happily, we’re exempt, according to one reviewer: ‟But the 'strength' category has nothing between 17% and 37.5% - so I cannot enter sherry, port, sloe gin and lots of other drinks.”
Re: Alcohol and health
RealSimple (life made easier, every day) wrote:The Downside of Drinking
In addition to the immediate risks associated with alcohol use”•loss of coordination, hangovers”•there are other negatives. Here is a look at the most common risks.
by Sara Reistad-Long
Can Increase the Risk of Breast Cancer
The perils of excessive drinking, specifically alcoholism and its attendant health issues, are well documented. Medium to heavy consumption has additional drawbacks. Research presented at the 2007 European Cancer Conference indicates that having three or more drinks a day may increase your risk of breast cancer by 30 percent. This news isn’t as dramatic as it first seems. A typical woman in her 50s already has about a 3 percent risk of the disease, so a 30 percent jump would bump her risk to nearly 4 percent. But most experts agree that this is reason enough to cut back.
Alcohol Can Stress Your Skin
The ethanol in alcohol dilates blood vessels, says David Colbert, a dermatologist in New York City. ‟Initially you might flush a bit during a night out,” he says. ‟But over time too much drinking can stretch the capillaries, sometimes to the point where they expand, giving your face a permanent red hue.”
This list omitted the real peril of drinking: cellar depletion. ‟The typical port drinker will initiate the drinking process by extracting from the cellar, or electrical equivalent, a bottle”, explains Professor Tongs of the Centre For Vintage Studies at ThePortForum University. ‟This depletes the stock of bottles in the cellar by at least one, and sometimes more. This process seems particularly strong in France we are investigating whether this is related to higher bread consumption, or to vitamin P deficiency (caused by a diet deficient in large pork pies).”[url=http://www.realsimple.com/health/preventative-health/downside-drinking-00000000006195/page2.html]RealSimple (life made easier, every day), on page 2[/url], wrote:Drinking Can Lead To Overeating
Alcohol doesn’t stimulate appetite per se, but if you’re struggling to control your eating, drinking can lower your inhibitions and weaken your resolve to steer clear of the cocktail nuts. According to a study published in the April 2007 issue of the journal Eating Behaviors, people who had a tendency to overeat consumed more food when drinking than did others who drank the same amount. ‟Alcohol often weakens our self-control and makes us more likely to prioritize immediate gratification over longer-term goals,” says Keith Humphreys, Ph.D., a professor of psychiatry at the Stanford University School of Medicine. In fact, there may be a physiological reason for this. Alcohol uses the body’s glucose reserves, and recently scientists at Florida State University, in Tallahassee, found that glucose fuels the brain and that willpower is weaker when those levels are low. In addition, other research points to low glucose as the reason people crave a big meal the day after a night out.
Too Much Alcohol Affects Your Sleep
Sure, alcohol can help put you to bed, since it’s a sedative. But the alcohol will also wake you up later on. Here’s why that happens: ‟To keep your brain alert in the face of sedation, the brain alters the activity of certain hormones. The net effect is excitation that counterbalances the sedation,” says Robert Swift, a psychiatrist and an associate director of the Brown University Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, in Providence. But the effects of what you drink will wear off well before your system’s countermeasures do. ‟The relaxation effect goes away and you wake up in the middle of the night with your thoughts racing,” says Swift. To soften that imbalance, have your last drink two or more hours before you go to bed; this will help your brain to consciously unwind.
Re: Alcohol and health
I am so glad that I suffer from none of those symptoms when drinking Port. It must be very difficult for those who do have these weaknesses.[url=http://www.realsimple.com/health/preventative-health/downside-drinking-00000000006195/page2.html]RealSimple (life made easier, every day), on page 2[/url], wrote:drinking can lower your inhibitions and weaken your resolve ... [and] ... often weakens our self-control and makes us more likely to prioritize immediate gratification over longer-term goals
It is hard to believe that in the 21st century most of the world stands by whilst fellow human beings are left to suffer in this way. Surely a well-stocked cellar and a constant supply of pork pies are basic human rights? This really is scandellous. Perhaps we should organise a rock concert and a telethon to help these poor souls in their hour of need?jdaw1 wrote:This list omitted the real peril of drinking: cellar depletion. ‟The typical port drinker will initiate the drinking process by extracting from the cellar, or electrical equivalent, a bottle”, explains Professor Tongs of the Centre For Vintage Studies at ThePortForum University. ‟This depletes the stock of bottles in the cellar by at least one, and sometimes more. This process seems particularly strong in France we are investigating whether this is related to higher bread consumption, or to vitamin P deficiency (caused by a diet deficient in large pork pies).”
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: Alcohol and health
Or is it your spelling that is scandalous?DRT wrote:This really is scandellous.
They must be large pork pies. Baby-size pies don’t have vitamin P.DRT wrote:a constant supply of pork pies
Re: Alcohol and health
Appologies for the proposteras spelling.jdaw1 wrote:Or is it your spelling that is scandalous?DRT wrote:This really is scandellous.
Noted. For those not familiar with official EU standards for the definition of a "large pork pie" please note that the scale starts at "extra small".jdaw1 wrote:They must be large pork pies. Baby-size pies don’t have vitamin P.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: Alcohol and health
The website of The Economist has A map of world alcohol consumption, which happily confirms lots of prejudices. Underneath this article one can comment.
[url=http://www.economist.com/comment/831337#comment-831337]Here[/url] mr.bungle wrote:The chart shows consumption by people aged 15+. So I guess it means total sales divided by population of 15+. So this is grossly misleading. In Eastern Europe we start drinking at the age of 8, so if you divided the consumption by the total number of actual consumers, we wouldn't be in the red zone. We are healthier than the chart shows
[url=http://www.economist.com/comment/831670#comment-831670]Here[/url] erudio wrote:I find it funny how everyone commenting from a red country is proud and everyone in lighter colors is saying they need to drink more.
I don't think that's what this study was going for.
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Glenn E.
- Cálem Quinta da Foz 1970
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Re: Alcohol and health
Given the other thread we have here, I thought this comment apropros.Zambino wrote: Feb 14th 2011 1:09 GMT So, the conclusion being that not only have Australians lost the ability to play test cricket, but they don't even know how to drink properly anymore.
Glenn Elliott
Re: Alcohol and health
The BBC, in an article entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-12397254]Why is alcohol consumption falling?[/url], wrote:Despite new evidence that more people are being treated in hospital for excessive drinking, the overall trend is that we are drinking less as a nation. Why?
!
But behind these stories is an unexpected truth - Britons have been drinking less and less every year since 2002.
Men and women of all ages are slowly curbing their excesses and drinking in moderation, according to the annual survey from the Office for National Statistics, which covers England, Scotland and Wales.
It suggests that heavy drinking is falling, abstinence is rising, and young people are leading the drive towards healthier drinking.
!
"In reality, we see a fairly deep-rooted decline in alcohol consumption which dates back to 2004. That's not something you see acknowledged in the media."
!
But that decline started long before the credit crunch kicked in - 2004 according to the BBPA and 2002 by the ONS figures. So what happened?
!
Re: Alcohol and health
Quite right to grumble: ‟action to reduce under-age drinking” doesn’t obviously include a 21Y rule for VP.The BBC, in an article entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-12728629]Health groups reject 'responsibility deal' on alcohol[/url], wrote:Six leading health groups have dealt the government a blow by refusing to sign up to its new "responsibility deal" on alcohol in England.
The deal covers voluntary agreements with the drinks industry on issues such as promotions and labelling, aimed at tackling alcohol abuse.
But the organisations, including Alcohol Concern, accused ministers of not being tough enough on the industry.
The government said the deal was just one strand of its public health policy.
The groups, which also include the Royal College of Physicians and the British Liver Trust, were asked to sign up to the alcohol part of the deal to show a united front between industry, health and government.
As well as alcohol there are separate workstreams on other issues, such as food and physical activity.
The full details of the responsibility deal have yet to be unveiled, with an announcement expected this week, but under it, the drinks industry would be expected to sign up to a number of alcohol pledges.
'Lack of clarity'
These reportedly include ensuring 80% of products on the shelf are labelled for unit content, raising awareness of the unit content of drinks in pubs and clubs and taking action to reduce under-age drinking.
- JacobH
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Re: Alcohol and health
What would the Portman group make of this?Château Changyu wrote:Although wine is important to our health, excessive drinking and drinking at any time are not encouraged. So moderate drinking of wine is important and people should also know how to drink wine correctly.
[...]
If people drink wine with food, wine and other food are digested together. The absorption of wine in this way is slowed down to 1-3 hours which allow adequate time for the scavenger of active oxygen. This way of drinking is good for digestion. It also helps to stimulate people’s appetite and inhibit the absorption of alcohol. In fact, the content of alcohol in blood is only about 1/2 than that of drinking without food.
[...]
Some people don’t drink much so that they can not enjoy the health and fun that wine brings to them. According to research made by Australian scientists in 1997, it is better for men to drink 1-4 glasses and for women to drink 1-2 glasses of wine every day.
[...]
The heat energy brought to people in the form of alcohol can not be more than20% of what people need. This is the scientific measurement to the amount of wine drinking. According to people’s difference in height, weight and labor intensity, an adult needs 1200-2400 calories of heat energy for the whole day,? that is? 50-100 calories/hour. So the drinking amount of wine should be 0.4-0.8 liters/day,? that is one or half bottle of ordinary dry wine.
[...]
It is obvious that all of us can benefit from moderate drinking of wine
Re: Alcohol and health
The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-13863196]People over 65 should drink less, a report says[/url], wrote:Recommended safe limits for drinking alcohol by older people should be drastically cut, according to a report.
The Royal College of Psychiatrists says people over 65 should drink a maximum of only 1.5 units of alcohol a day.
That is the equivalent of just over about half a pint of beer or a small glass of wine.
The report says older drinkers are less able to process alcohol and the drink might also interact with medication they may be taking for other ailments.
A group of experts from the Royal College of Psychiatrists says there is a growing problem with substance abuse among older people, who they describe as society's "invisible addicts".
The report says a third those who experience problems with alcohol abuse do so later on in life, often as a result of big changes like retirement, bereavement or feelings of boredom, loneliness and depression.
But the extent of the drinking is hidden because unlike younger drinkers, more older people drink in their own homes, the report suggests.
The problem is exacerbated by the widespread use - and misuse - of prescribed and over-the-counter medicines among elderly people which can interact badly with alcohol.
Compounding the problems are the changes our bodies undergo as we get older which mean we are less able to cope with the effects of alcohol.
The report is calling for the government to issue separate advice on safe drinking limits for older people, with an upper "safe limit" of 1.5 units of alcohol a day, or 11 units per week.
The report's authors warn that current advice - 14 units of alcohol for women and 21 for men each week - is based on work with young adults.
- JacobH
- Quinta do Vesuvio 1994
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Re: Alcohol and health
Royal College of Psychiatrists? Seems an odd college to produce such a report...
Re: Alcohol and health
My father (medical doctor, epidemiologist) is very scathing of this report. Drink contributes to various illnesses over the long term, but provides lots of comfort short term. Which matters for old people, he asks rhetorically.
Re: Alcohol and health
The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-14154404]Binge drinking 'can damage memory skills' in teen girls[/url], wrote:Binge-drinking young women were defined as those drinking more than three pints of beer or more than four glasses of wine at one sitting. Binge-drinking men drank four pints of beer or a bottle of wine.
Re: Alcohol and health
The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14232970]Russia classifies beer as alcoholic[/url], wrote:Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has signed a bill that officially classifies beer as alcoholic.
Until now anything containing less than 10% alcohol in Russia has been considered a foodstuff.
The move, signed into law on Wednesday, will allow ministers to control the sale of beer in the same way that spirits are controlled.
Russian alcohol consumption is already twice the critical level set by the World Health Organization.
Although vodka has long been the traditional tipple in Russia, beer has soared in popularity, being marketed as a healthier alternative to spirits.
Over the past decade, beer sales in Russia have risen more than 40% while vodka sales have fallen by nearly 30%.
Re: Alcohol and health
There is also a video, shot in a hospital, showing lots of people who had not been drinking properly-decanted vintage port.The BBC, reporting on a Panorama investigation, [url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/panorama/hi/front_page/newsid_9548000/9548887.stm]Alcoholic liver disease taking its toll on the young[/url], wrote:Liver disease is now the country's fifth biggest killer and cases of alcoholic liver disease in the under-30s have risen by half in the past 10 years, says the Department of Health. The coalition wants a "drink strategy" with input from both the health lobby and the drinks industry, but can they work together?
Victoria White was lying in a bed at Liverpool's Royal Hospital, her skin yellow in colour, her belly badly swollen and her life hanging in the balance.
Ms White's liver disease is the result of heavy drinking.
She began drinking as a teenager and before her most recent hospital stay she had been consuming at least a bottle of brandy a day.
Doctors say her case is not unusual. According to government figures, a quarter of the adult population are thought to be drinking too much alcohol.
"Some people go their separate ways from alcohol. I didn't, I just carried on with it. You are selfish through drink. As long as you are all right, you just do not care," Ms White said.
Her mother, Debbie White, has watched alcohol slowly take over her daughter's life.
"When she was about 16 she started lying saying she had not had a drink but you could smell it on her. We would start finding bottles of vodka, bottles and bottles of cider hidden under her bed," she said.
Ms White was hospitalised in the past because of alcohol and nearly died five years ago. She was warned then that she needed to stop drinking.
"I was OK at first. I would just have a couple and leave it and then as the days went to weeks I just started drinking again. And here I am today," she said from her hospital bed.
In agreeing to be interviewed in such ill health, she urged others to learn from her mistakes.
Ms White's doctor, liver specialist Paul Richardson, said his colleagues are seeing similar cases of irreparable damage.
"Both locally and nationally, people who work in hepatology have noticed an increase in alcoholic liver disease in a younger population," he said.
Overall consumption is falling but alcohol-related hospital admissions have doubled in a decade.
In 2010, there were more than a million admissions, according to hospital statistics.
Professor Sir Ian Gilmore is chair of the UK Alcohol Health Alliance, which campaigns to increase awareness about alcohol.
"It's very difficult to know why our culture has changed so radically, but all the evidence suggests that the big drivers for the amount people drink are the price, the availability and the marketing and that is what we have been trying to push governments to look at."
The health and financial costs of alcohol abuse led the coalition government to create a working group that included both the drinks industry and the health lobby.
Brokering a strategy has been challenging.
Health groups, including the British Medical Association, decided to withdraw from the government's consultation process in March, citing the influence of the drinks industry on policy-making.
Anne Milton, the Minister for Public Health, said she was disappointed by their decision. "I am sad that people stopped talking to us because it is never productive," she said.
Gavin Partington of the Wine and Spirit Trade Association, said the industry is very willing to help limit alcohol abuse, and large companies are increasingly aware of their social responsibilities. "It is important for them to be seen to implement policies that are going to be tackling what is a very real problem."
But he said the industry believes in voluntary codes of practice rather than legislation to limit the availability, price or advertising.
He also added that people consuming dangerous and irresponsible levels of alcohol are in the minority.
The government's alcohol strategy report is expected later this year.
Re: Alcohol and health
The Public Library of Science (Medicine), in a paper entitled [url=http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.1001090]Alcohol Consumption at Midlife and Successful Ageing in Women: A Prospective Cohort Analysis in the Nurses' Health Study[/url], wrote:Background
Observational studies have documented inverse associations between moderate alcohol consumption and risk of premature death. It is largely unknown whether moderate alcohol intake is also associated with overall health and well-being among populations who have survived to older age. In this study, we prospectively examined alcohol use assessed at midlife in relation to successful ageing in a cohort of US women.
Methods and Findings
Alcohol consumption at midlife was assessed using a validated food frequency questionnaire. Subsequently, successful ageing was defined in 13,894 Nurses' Health Study participants who survived to age 70 or older, and whose health status was continuously updated. ‟Successful ageing” was considered as being free of 11 major chronic diseases and having no major cognitive impairment, physical impairment, or mental health limitations. Analyses were restricted to the 98.1% of participants who were not heavier drinkers (>45 g/d) at midlife. Of all eligible study participants, 1,491 (10.7%) achieved successful ageing. After multivariable adjustment of potential confounders, light-to-moderate alcohol consumption at midlife was associated with modestly increased odds of successful ageing. ! Meanwhile, independent of total alcohol intake, participants who drank alcohol at regular patterns throughout the week, rather than on a single occasion, had somewhat better odds of successful ageing !
Conclusions
These data suggest that regular, moderate consumption of alcohol at midlife may be related to a modest increase in overall health status among women who survive to older ages.
Re: Alcohol and health
If the inference from this is that 45 grams of alcohol per day is considered moderate and beneficial (or not detrimental) to health, that gives a fairly generous guilt-free daily port allowance...
Density of alcohol (ethanol) at room temperature (21 degrees) = 0.7886 g/ml.
A daily allowance of 45 grams = 57ml of alcohol.
57ml of alcohol = just over one third of a bottle of port per day (assuming 750ml bottle and 20% abv, more precisely 0.38 of a bottle or 19/50ths)
Since their study was on women, I am going to presume (unscientifically) that this allowance could safely be scaled up to a respectable 1/2 bottle for a big strapping man, though their finding that the daily allowance cannot be saved up like pocket money and spent on the occasional orgy of port is a pity (but not unexpected!).
Density of alcohol (ethanol) at room temperature (21 degrees) = 0.7886 g/ml.
A daily allowance of 45 grams = 57ml of alcohol.
57ml of alcohol = just over one third of a bottle of port per day (assuming 750ml bottle and 20% abv, more precisely 0.38 of a bottle or 19/50ths)
Since their study was on women, I am going to presume (unscientifically) that this allowance could safely be scaled up to a respectable 1/2 bottle for a big strapping man, though their finding that the daily allowance cannot be saved up like pocket money and spent on the occasional orgy of port is a pity (but not unexpected!).
Rob C.
Re: Alcohol and health
All hail Dr Coombes!
Re: Alcohol and health
The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/14898601]Alcohol was Amy Winehouse's downfall, says father Mitch[/url], wrote:Amy Winehouse's father has said his daughter was trying to overcome an addiction with alcohol, but not drugs, before her death.
Mitch Winehouse said she had been clean of illegal drugs for three years before she died in July.
He told Newsbeat she had replaced her previous drug problems with addictions to exercise and shopping.
But added: "Then it was drinking and unfortunately that's not quite so easy to over come."
Re: Alcohol and health
The BBC, in a miserable article entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-15114325]What damage does alcohol do to our bodies?[/url], wrote:We know that drinking too much alcohol is bad for us. It gives us hangovers, makes us feel tired and does little for our appearance - and that is just the morning afterwards.
Long term, it increases the risk of developing a long list of health conditions including breast cancer, oral cancers, heart disease, strokes and cirrhosis of the liver.
Research shows that a high alcohol intake can also damage our mental health, impair memory skills and reduce fertility.
The direct link between alcohol and the liver is well understood - but what about the impact of alcohol on other organs?
Numerous heart studies suggest that moderate alcohol consumption helps protect against heart disease by raising good cholesterol and stopping the formation of blood clots in the arteries.
Toxic
However, drinking more than three drinks a day has been found to have a direct and damaging effect on the heart. Heavy drinking, particularly over time, can lead to high blood pressure, alcoholic cardiomyopathy, congestive heart failure and stroke. Heavy drinking also puts more fat into the circulation of the body.
The link between alcohol and cancer is well established, says Cancer Research UK. A study published in the BMJ this year estimated that alcohol consumption causes at least 13,000 cancer cases in the UK each year - about 9,000 cases in men and 4,000 in women.
Cancer experts say that for every additional 10g per day of alcohol drunk, the risk of breast cancer increases by approximately 7-12%.
For bowel cancer, previous studies show that increasing alcohol intake by 100g per week increases the cancer risk by 19%.
A recent report in BioMed Central's Immunology journal found that alcohol impairs the body's ability to fight off viral infections.
And studies on fertility suggest that even light drinking can make women less likely to conceive while heavy drinking in men can lower sperm quality and quantity.
Why alcohol has this negative effect on all elements of our health could be down to acetaldehyde - the product alcohol is broken down into in the body.
Acetaldehyde is toxic and has been shown to damage DNA.
Dr KJ Patel, from the Medical Research Council's laboratory of molecular biology in Cambridge, recently completed a study into the toxic effects of alcohol on mice.
His research implies that a single binge-drinking dose of alcohol during pregnancy may be sufficient to cause permanent damage to a baby's genome.
Foetal alcohol syndrome, he says, "can give rise to children who are seriously damaged, born with head and facial abnormalities and mental disabilities".
'Clear dose relationship'
Alcohol is a well-established cancer causing agent, he says.
"You cannot get a cancer cell occurring unless DNA is altered. When you drink, the acetaldehyde is corrupting the DNA of life and puts you on the road to cancer.
"One of most common genetic defects in man is our inability to counteract the toxicity of alcohol."
Dr Nick Sheron, who runs the liver unit at Southampton General Hospital, says the mechanisms by which alcohol does damage are not quite so clear cut.
"The toxicity of alcohol is complex, but we do know there is a clear dose relationship."
With alcoholic liver disease, the greater the alcohol intake per week the greater the liver damage and that increases exponentially for someone drinking six to eight bottles or more of wine in that period, for example.
Over the past 20 to 30 years, Dr Sheron says, deaths from liver disease have increased by 500%, with 85% of those due to alcohol. Only in the last few years has that rise slowed down.
"Alcohol has a bigger impact than smoking on our health because alcohol kills at a younger age. The average age of death for someone with alcoholic liver disease is their 40s."
'More harmful than heroin or crack'
Alcohol is undoubtedly a public health issue too.
Earlier this year, NHS figures showed that alcohol-related hospital admissions has reached record levels in 2010. Over a million people were admitted in 2009-10, compared with 945,500 in 2008-09 and 510,800 in 2002-03. Nearly two in three of those cases were men.
At the same time the charity Alcohol Concern predicted the number of admissions would reach 1.5m a year by 2015 and cost the NHS £3.7bn a year.
Last year, a study in The Lancet concluded that alcohol is more harmful than heroin or crack when the overall dangers to the individual and society are considered.
The study by the Independent Scientific Committee on Drugs also ranked alcohol as three times more harmful than cocaine or tobacco because it is so widely used.
So how much alcohol is too much? What can we safely drink?
The government guidelines on drinking are being reviewed at present. They currently say that a women should not drink more than two to three units of alcohol per day and a man three to four units a day.
But Paul Wallace, a GP and chief medical adviser of Drinkaware, says people are just not aware of the alcohol content of a large glass of wine.
"Most of us don't realise what we're drinking and you can very easily slip beyond acceptable limits."
Katherine Brown, head of research at the Institute of Alcohol Studies, says the current guidelines and how they are communicated may be giving the public misleading information.
"We need to be very careful when suggesting there is a 'safe' level of drinking for the population. Rather, we need to explain that there are risks associated with alcohol consumption, and that the less you drink the lower your risk is of developing health problems.
"We hope the government use this as an opportunity to help change perceptions about regular drinking being a normal, risk-free practice."
Dr Wallace wants the government to do a better job on the message it sends out by explaining the alcohol guidelines in units per week, rather than per day - no more than 21 units for men, 14 units for women per week.
Dr Sheron agrees: "There is no such thing as a safe level, but the government has got to draw a line somewhere. It's a balance.
"People like having a drink, but they have to accept there's a risk-benefit ratio."
Re: Alcohol and health
A very interesting article, including brief descriptions of some interesting experiments.
The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15265317]Viewpoint: Is the alcohol message all wrong?[/url], wrote:Many people think heavy drinking causes promiscuity, violence and anti-social behaviour. That's not necessarily true, argues Kate Fox.
!
The problem is that we Brits believe that alcohol has magical powers - that it causes us to shed our inhibitions and become aggressive, promiscuous, disorderly and even violent.
But we are wrong.
In high doses, alcohol impairs our reaction times, muscle control, co-ordination, short-term memory, perceptual field, cognitive abilities and ability to speak clearly. But it does not cause us selectively to break specific social rules. It does not cause us to say, "Oi, what you lookin' at?" and start punching each other. Nor does it cause us to say, "Hey babe, fancy a shag?" and start groping each other.
The effects of alcohol on behaviour are determined by cultural rules and norms, not by the chemical actions of ethanol.
There is enormous cross-cultural variation in the way people behave when they drink alcohol. There are some societies (such as the UK, the US, Australia and parts of Scandinavia) that anthropologists call "ambivalent" drinking-cultures, where drinking is associated with disinhibition, aggression, promiscuity, violence and anti-social behaviour.
There are other societies (such as Latin and Mediterranean cultures in particular, but in fact the vast majority of cultures), where drinking is not associated with these undesirable behaviours - cultures where alcohol is just a morally neutral, normal, integral part of ordinary, everyday life - about on a par with, say, coffee or tea. These are known as "integrated" drinking cultures.
This variation cannot be attributed to different levels of consumption - most integrated drinking cultures have significantly higher per-capita alcohol consumption than the ambivalent drinking cultures.
Instead the variation is clearly related to different cultural beliefs about alcohol, different expectations about the effects of alcohol, and different social rules about drunken comportment.
This basic fact has been proved time and again, not just in qualitative cross-cultural research, but also in carefully controlled scientific experiments - double-blind, placebos and all. To put it very simply, the experiments show that when people think they are drinking alcohol, they behave according to their cultural beliefs about the behavioural effects of alcohol.
The British and other ambivalent drinking cultures believe that alcohol is a disinhibitor, and specifically that it makes people amorous or aggressive, so when in these experiments we are given what we think are alcoholic drinks - but are in fact non-alcoholic "placebos" - we shed our inhibitions.
We become more outspoken, more physically demonstrative, more flirtatious, and, given enough provocation, some (young males in particular) become aggressive. Quite specifically, those who most strongly believe that alcohol causes aggression are the most likely to become aggressive when they think that they have consumed alcohol.
Our beliefs about the effects of alcohol act as self-fulfilling prophecies - if you firmly believe and expect that booze will make you aggressive, then it will do exactly that. In fact, you will be able to get roaring drunk on a non-alcoholic placebo.
And our erroneous beliefs provide the perfect excuse for anti-social behaviour. If alcohol "causes" bad behaviour, then you are not responsible for your bad behaviour. You can blame the booze - "it was the drink talking", "I was not myself" and so on.
But it is possible to change our drinking culture. Cultural shifts happen all the time, and there is extensive evidence (again from carefully controlled experiments, conducted in natural settings such as bars and nightclubs) to show that it doesn't take much to effect dramatic changes in how people behave when they drink.
These experiments show that even when people are very drunk, if they are given an incentive (either financial reward or even just social approval) they are perfectly capable of remaining in complete control of their behaviour - of behaving as though they were totally sober.
To achieve these changes, we need a complete and radical re-think of the aims and messages of all alcohol-education campaigns. So far, these efforts have perpetuated or even exacerbated the problem, because almost all of them simply reinforce our beliefs about the magical disinhibiting powers of alcohol.
The drinkaware website, for example, warns young people that a mere three pints of beer (ie a perfectly normal evening out) "can lead to anti-social, aggressive and violent behaviour", that "you might start saying things you don't mean and behaving out of character", that alcohol is implicated in a high percentage of sexual offences and street crimes, and that the morning after "you may wonder what you did the night before".
I would like to see a complete change of focus, with all alcohol-education and awareness campaigns designed specifically to challenge these beliefs - to get across the message that a) alcohol does not cause disinhibition (aggressive, sexual or otherwise) and that b) even when you are drunk, you are in control of and have total responsibility for your actions and behaviour.
Re: Alcohol and health
The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-16366628]Fake vodka warning issued by council trading standard teams[/url], wrote:People seeking cheap alcohol as part of new year celebrations have been warned by council trading standards teams about the dangers of counterfeit vodka.
Fake vodka recently seized had high levels of methanol, which can cause blindness, and industrial solvents.
Misaligned labels and liquid with an odour resembling nail varnish are among telltale signs of counterfeit vodka.
The Local Government Association in England and Wales warned that fake vodka could be deadly.
Re: Alcohol and health
Interesting.The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-16354472]Detoxing in January is futile, says liver charity[/url], which is illustrated with a photograph of an attractive damsel drinking a large glass of vodka, wrote:Giving up alcohol or going on a detox for one month is pointless, especially after the excesses of the festive season, says a liver charity.
Instead, the British Liver Trust says drinkers should make a decision to stay off alcohol for a few days every week throughout the whole year.
Experts agree that a short period of complete abstinence will not improve liver health.
A longer-term attitude to alcohol is more desirable, the charity said.
Andrew Langford, chief executive of the British Liver Trust, said that people tend to believe the hype about rejuvenating their liver by detoxing in January.
"People think they're virtuous with their health by embarking on a liver detox each January with the belief that they are cleansing their liver of excess following the festive break.
"A one-hit, one-month attempt to achieve long-term liver health is not the way to approach it.
"You're better off making a resolution to take a few days off alcohol a week throughout the entire year than remaining abstinent for January only."
The thinking behind this approach is that total alcohol intake per person is kept down and the liver is given time to recover each week.
Providing the liver has no lasting damage, it can repair itself very quickly, taking as little as 24 hours to go back to normal.
Dr Mark Wright, consultant hepatologist at Southampton General Hospital, said detoxing created its own problems.
"Detoxing for just a month in January is medically futile. It can lead to a false sense of security and feeds the idea that you can abuse your liver as much as you like and then sort everything else with a quick fix.
"It makes about as much sense as maxing out your credit cards and overdraft all year, then thinking you can fix it by just eating toast in January. The figures just don't stack up," said Dr Wright.
The British Liver Trust is launching a campaign called 'Love Your Liver' to encourage people to maintain a healthy liver.
As part of the campaign, it also advises eating well and exercising regularly.
"If you are overweight you increase your risk of liver disease by three times if you drink alcohol too.
"Cutting down on your daily food indulgences and not overloading on sugary drinks will all help to optimise your liver function," the Trust's website says.
> Providing the liver has no lasting damage, it can repair itself very quickly, taking as little as 24 hours to go back to normal.
So the message is that either the liver has permanent damage, and there’s nothing you can do about it, or it hasn’t, in which case, carry on.
Re: Alcohol and health
Doubtless a separate campaign, also billed to the taxpayer, will explain the difference between this campaign and scare-mongering.The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-16869618]Campaign warns of drinking 'little too much' alcohol[/url], wrote:Drinking "just a little more than they should" puts people at risk of serious illness including heart disease, stroke and cancer, the government is warning.
A TV advertising campaign is being launched to press home the message.
It warns regularly drinking two large glasses of wine or two strong pints of beer a day triples mouth cancer risk and doubles high blood pressure risk.
People "should not regularly exceed" the daily limit of three to four units for men and two to three for women.
Re: Alcohol and health
The NHS alcohol page leads to a page entitled Hangover cures, which comes close to my view: ‟Dehydration is what causes many of the symptoms of a hangover”. My guess is the primary route by which alcohol does any harm is dehydration: CH₃CHâ‚‚OH + enough water does little or no harm.
Re: Alcohol and health
Is a bottle of Graham's Six Grapes one more than your 5 a Day?
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: Alcohol and health
Not alcohol, more post-alcohol.
It’s free if finished in an hour. Even the proprietor admits ‟Obviously that’s not something you should eat every day.”The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-18490459]Attempting to tackle the 'super-sized' fried breakfast[/url], wrote:As part of his investigation into why British people are on average nearly three stone (24kg) heavier than 50 years ago, Jacques Peretti attempts to eat what is thought to be one of Britain's biggest fried breakfasts.
A reflection of the rise in popularity of super-sizing food, Jester's diner in Great Yarmouth serves a breakfast that includes 8 eggs, 12 rashers of bacon, 12 sausages, potatoes, mushrooms, hash browns, black pudding, beans and 12 slices of bread.
It is called the "Challenge Kidz Breakfast" because it weighs the same as a small child, around 9lbs.
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Andy Velebil
- Quinta do Vesuvio 1994
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Re: Alcohol and health
Your numbersjdaw1 wrote:BBC: Where are you on the global fat scale?
Obesity Index
24bmi
BMI is an estimate of how "overweight" or "obese" a person is
National
Below average
You have a lower BMI than 85% of males aged 30-44 in your country
Global
Below average
You have a lower BMI than 54% of males aged 30-44 in the world
WOOHOO, I am below the national and global average. I can drink more port now.
Though the BMI is WAY off. My body fat is about the 9-10% range at the moment. Hardly corresponds to a BMI that is one point away from being considered overweight.
*edit: for me getting below about 7% is not good (been tested lots due to cycling) as I get nose bleeds, headaches, and look like I've been starved.
Re: Alcohol and health
The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-19436926]Beer-glass shape alters people's drinking speed - study[/url], wrote:The shape of your glass is probably the last thing on your mind when you are down the pub.
However, researchers at the University of Bristol believe the shape of beer glasses affects the speed people drink.
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Andy Velebil
- Quinta do Vesuvio 1994
- Posts: 3113
- Joined: 21:16 Mon 25 Jun 2007
- Location: Los Angeles, Ca USA
- Contact:
Re: Alcohol and health
Yes. One must drink quickly before it gets too warm.jdaw1 wrote:The BBC, in a story entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-19436926]Beer-glass shape alters people's drinking speed - study[/url], wrote:The shape of your glass is probably the last thing on your mind when you are down the pub.
However, researchers at the University of Bristol believe the shape of beer glasses affects the speed people drink.
- Attachments
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Re: Alcohol and health
Note to self: cycling = unhealthy.Andy Velebil wrote:getting below about 7% is not good (been tested lots due to cycling) as I get nose bleeds, headaches, and look like I've been starved.
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Andy Velebil
- Quinta do Vesuvio 1994
- Posts: 3113
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Re: Alcohol and health
That's why I drink plenty of Port. It helps keep the weight onjdaw1 wrote:Note to self: cycling = unhealthy.Andy Velebil wrote:getting below about 7% is not good (been tested lots due to cycling) as I get nose bleeds, headaches, and look like I've been starved.
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Glenn E.
- Cálem Quinta da Foz 1970
- Posts: 4546
- Joined: 21:27 Wed 09 Jul 2008
- Location: Seattle, WA, USA
Re: Alcohol and health
My BMI is 23. My body fat, as determined by one of those scales that uses electrical resistance to determine it, is 17%. I'm below average in the US (92% of males 45-59 have a higher BMI than I do) and below average worldwide (68% of males 45-59 have a higher BMI than I do). I'm most like an average 48-yr old male from Gambia.jdaw1 wrote:BBC: Where are you on the global fat scale?
That's bad. I don't think they have much Port in Gambia.
Glenn Elliott
Re: Alcohol and health
I also have a BMI of 23, which means that I haven't been drinking enough Port...
Obesity Index
23bmi
BMI is an estimate of how "overweight" or "obese" a person is National
Below average
You have a lower BMI than 91% of males aged 45-59 in your country Global
Below average
You have a lower BMI than 67% of males aged 45-59 in the world
Obesity Index
23bmi
BMI is an estimate of how "overweight" or "obese" a person is National
Below average
You have a lower BMI than 91% of males aged 45-59 in your country Global
Below average
You have a lower BMI than 67% of males aged 45-59 in the world
Re: Alcohol and health
I do not know my BMI. I do not want to know my BMI. That has me most like males in the UK. This is good, as there is Port in the UK.
Re: Alcohol and health
An American definition, vaguely recalled, said that Baby Boomers were those born after WW2, but old enough to remember the first moon landing. And there’s fancy detail at www.alcoholconcern.couldthisbe.com.The BBC, in an article entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-19913431]Baby boomer alcohol harm 'more likely than in young'[/url], wrote:More NHS money is spent treating alcohol-related illness in baby boomers than young people, a study says.
The Alcohol Concern report found the cost of hospital admissions linked to heavy drinking 55 to 74-year-olds in 2010-11 was more than £825m.
That was 10 times the figure for 16 to 24-year-olds.
In total, nearly £2bn was spent on alcohol-related in-patient admissions in England, the report found.
This comes as more than 10 million people in England are drinking above the recommended levels, according to the report.
Also see the video report.
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Glenn E.
- Cálem Quinta da Foz 1970
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- Joined: 21:27 Wed 09 Jul 2008
- Location: Seattle, WA, USA
Re: Alcohol and health
1946-1964, according to the United States Census Bureau. There's some argument that the "Baby Boomer" generation is actually two separate groups that have been lumped together, with the alleged split occuring in 1955. If you believe in the split, the latter half is sometimes refered to as Generation Jones, as-in "keeping up with the Joneses."jdaw1 wrote:An American definition, vaguely recalled, said that Baby Boomers were those born after WW2, but old enough to remember the first moon landing.
Glenn Elliott
Re: Alcohol and health
The BBC, in an article entitled [url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/0/19813810]James Bond: Does 007 eat all the wrong things?[/url], wrote:Catherine Collins says she would probably recommend more carbs, and "it would probably be good for him to have a couple of alcohol-free days".
That might be difficult for a man who accompanies every meal with alcohol, except breakfast, when he drinks black coffee.
"When he starts a meal, he probably has a vodka with a starter and then he goes on to wine, probably finished up with champagne," explains Edward Biddulph.
But Bond's regular drinking is "never excessive", says Ms Collins, and would be unlikely to cause much harm, or stop him from feeling too sluggish to perform his duties.





