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Even Low Alcohol Consumption
Negatively Impacts Overall Health
Low alcohol consumption is bad for your health in general. Researchers
writing in BioMed Central's open access journal Cost Effectiveness
and Resource Allocation studied the relationship between alcohol
consumption and health to test the current theory which suggests
improved health is responsible for the link found between low
alcohol consumption and increased wages.
Johan Jarl, from Lund University, Sweden, worked with a team
of researchers to determine the effect of low alcohol consumption
on health by measuring alcohol-related medical care costs and
episodes collected during the Swedish Cost of Alcohol Project
in 2002. They found that, with the exception of people more than
80 years old, men who consumed up to five units a day and women
who consumed up to 2.5 units a day cost the health service more
than those who do not drink. Their finding calls into question
the previous assumption that low alcohol consumption is good for
your health.
Several studies show that people with low alcohol intake are
more highly paid. One common, but untested, explanation for this
link is that low consumers spend more time at work and therefore
gets better pay due to the protective effect of alcohol on some
diseases. According to Jarl, "In this study, however, we
found that, when including also those diseases where low consumption
increases the risk of morbidity and mortality, low-to-moderate
alcohol intake actually has a net negative health impact,"
adding, "It is therefore doubtful if the common explanation
of health as the link between alcohol consumption and increased
wages is valid in its existing form."
Speaking about other factors that, in the light of these findings,
could account for the alcohol-wage link, Jarl said, "Family
background, social networking and subjective health benefits may
be responsible. It is not unlikely that the link is actually compiled
of several different factors that together give a significant
effect of low alcohol consumption on wage. It should come as no
surprise that the nature of links such as this is normally complex
and care should be taken not to oversimplify".
Reference
Source 128
October 23, 2009
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