Alcohol Has Zero Health Benefits — Is It Finally Time for Women to Stop Drinking?

In 1991, Sixty Minutes ran a segment that tackled the so-called “French paradox” — the phenomenon in which French folks had better heart health than Americans even though both countries consumed high-fat diets. The conclusion: French people had better heart health because they drank wine with dinner.

After the one-hour special, red wine sales in the United States spiked by almost 50 percent. And for more than thirty years, that was the truth we lived with; that not only is a glass of wine in celebration or a drink in commiseration harmless, but it’s even beneficial. Generations of women never had a reason to question the glass in their hands.  

As it turns out, that particular truth is not exactly true, and maybe we should bat an eye. Or both. More research has been coming out on the dangers of alcohol, with some debunking previous claims that it’s good for longevity.

As our understanding of alcohol and its impacts on our bodies and minds evolves, it’s becoming harder to justify the pervasiveness of alcohol’s role in women’s lives under the umbrella of health. But does that mean it’s time to quit drinking alcohol? The answer isn’t as cut and dry as we may want. 

In March 2023, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) published a review that analyzed four decades of alcohol research. The review authors found flaws in how the studies conducted their research and ultimately concluded that alcohol was associated with no positive health benefits.      

The main flaw the authors identified related to how those studies categorized drinkers versus nondrinkers. Many of the folks in the non-drinking group were actually former drinkers who’d given up alcohol after developing health issues. The review authors found that when they compared former drinkers to “lifetime abstainers” the former drinkers had “significantly elevated mortality risks compared with lifetime abstainers.”  

The review authors also noted that former studies did not account for the fact that their sample group of nondrinkers was largely made up of older men. Many might have been previous drinkers who may have given up alcohol for health reasons. They also did not factor in that light and occasional drinkers are “systemically healthier than current abstainers.” In other words, the light and moderate drinking group was made up of folks who were more likely to practice healthy habits such as dental hygiene and exercise routines to support healthier lifestyles. Meanwhile, abstainers geared more towards older age and were more “biased toward ill health.”

Taken all together, it means prior studies were wrong to simply look at both groups as if the only variable was alcohol consumption. When reviewers adjusted for all other factors, they found no benefit to alcohol consumption. 

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