An important article on alcohol use was published on August 23, 2018 in The Lancet, a leading, prestigious scientific journal based in the UK. This landmark study integrates and appears to do some new data analysis on 694 data sources collected over a 26-year period from 195 locations around the globe.
This is the first global integrated metadata analysis that we have seen on alcohol use. The methodology is strong, and researchers improved the analysis others had done when they could use original data.Their conclusions are ground breaking and should be definitive in world health.
“Consuming zero standard drinks daily minimizes the overall risk to health,” a groundbreaking study says.
Among the major findings are:
This study confirms that for more than 150 years, the Adventist health message does a great deal to enhance quality and length of life.
We sometimes persist in trawling the shark-infested waters of the definite evidence showing the dangers of alcohol use in search of one sardine’s worth of positive, healthful evidence in favor of alcohol use.
The number of voices in the scientific literature raising questions and caution regarding the widespread perception that moderate alcohol use is beneficial to health has achieved robust credibility. Although many papers and studies support the cardio-protective effect of alcohol (moderate drinking), this hypothesis is by no means definitive. Marchand et al emphasize the many problems of studies of alcohol use, include confounding; risk of abuse and dependence; methodological issues related to assessing dosing; level and duration of use over the life course; and non-representativeness of study populations in reaching this conclusion.1
There is also great concern about the diversity that exists among nondrinkers. Nondrinkers represent a very diverse group, adding to the confounding, and variation in this group needs to be studied. This latest meta-analysis of global data published in The Lancet confirms other commentaries on the limitations of the evidence for a beneficial effect for moderate alcohol consumption, concluding, “The evidence for the harmful effects of alcohol is undoubtedly stronger than the evidence for beneficial effects.”2
In Summary
Conclusion
Taking into account the significant health risks related to alcohol use, there is no scientific basis for promoting its use for the sake of heart health. This is especially so when proven and safe interventions for heart disease prevention and rehabilitation are available, including exercise, a healthful diet, and non-addictive, tested medications where needed.
There is no scientific basis for promoting alcohol use for the sake of heart health, Adventist health leaders say.
We sometimes persist in trawling the shark-infested waters of the definite evidence showing the dangers of alcohol use in search of one sardine’s worth of positive, healthful evidence in favor of alcohol use.
Certain lifestyle choices and measures offer protection against the problems alcohol inevitably brings in its wake: informed choices; exercise; rest; healthful eating; fresh air; sunshine; pure water (within and without); trust in God; social support; a good dose of optimism; and of course, temperance.
By definition, temperance encourages us to use wisely those things that are healthful and good, and to dispense entirely with all things harmful. Temperance, lived through the enabling power of our gracious Lord Jesus Christ, serves as a foundation for a Spirit-filled experience that can celebrate life free from alcohol and its attendant ills.
So, should people who don’t drink alcohol start to use it? Based on the best scientificevidence, definitely not! Should those who currently drink alcohol quit? Based on the same evidence, unequivocally yes!
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1. Marchand, Alain, Andree Demers, Pierre Durand, and Marcel Simard, “The moderating effect of alcohol intake on the relationship between work strains and psychological distress.” Journal of Studies on Alcohol 64, no. 3 (2003), 419-427.
2. Fekjaer, Hans Olav. “Alcohol—a universal preventive agent? A critical analysis.” Addiction 108, no. 12 (December 2013), 2051-2057.