Alcohol+benefits

Alcohol is good for you? Some scientists have been studying how alcohol can be good for you. For men, the proper amount of alcohol is 2 drinks, for women it is 1 drink. It helps circulate your blood and ward off diseases, but if you drink too much it is bad for you. A lot of scientists are debating about this, although the words are facing towards it is good for you. This is good for a healthy lifestyle. Some scientists agree that moderate drinkers have a lower life expectancy. But this is only if you drink a lot. If you are a moderate drinker, you have the right amount to drink and exercise. Moderate drinkers don’t smoke but do drink appropriately. They also eat the right amount. A lot of scientists disagree with these theories, they studied the topic and it has come back to haunt them since, the scientists don’t like to think about this. These scientists are giving you a warning that drinking is a bad thing and that you shouldn’t ever drink too much. Alcohol can give you breast cancer or even liver cancer. It can also give you serious heart damage. A lot of people think that one glass of wine a day is good for you, it helps circulate blood in your heart, and even ward off diseases, but what if people got it all wrong? There hasn’t been a single scientific study confirming that moderate drinking is good for you. The moderate drinkers tend to do everything right, the exercise eat healthy etc… Even moderate drinkers change their recommendations with warnings about the dangers of alcohol, which has been related to breast cancer and can even lead to accidents when consumed in minute amounts, and is also linked with liver disease, cancers, heart damage and strokes when consumed in large amounts. “The bottom line is there has not been a single study done on moderate alcohol consumption and mortality outcomes that is a ‘gold standard’ kind of study — the kind of randomized controlled clinical trial that we would be required to have in order to approve a new pharmaceutical agent in this country,” said Dr. Tim Naimi, an epidemiologist with the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

Written by Chris Ip and Alex Keller.