An extensive body of data shows concordant J-shaped associations between alcohol intake and a variety of adverse health outcomes, including

  • coronary heart disease,
  • diabetes,
  • hypertension,
  • congestive heart failure,
  • stroke,
  • dementia,
  • Raynaud’s phenomenon, and
  • all-cause mortality.

Light to moderate alcohol consumption (up to 1 drink daily for women and 1 or 2 drinks daily for men) is associated with cardioprotective benefits, whereas increasingly excessive consumption results in proportional worsening of outcomes.

Alcohol consumption confers cardiovascular protection predominately through improvements in insulin sensitivity and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol.

The ethanol itself, rather than specific components of various alcoholic beverages, appears to be the major factor in conferring health benefits.

Low-dose daily alcohol is associated with better health than less frequent consumption.

Binge drinking, even among otherwise light drinkers, increases cardiovascular events and mortality.

Alcohol should not be universally prescribed for health enhancement to nondrinking individuals owing to the lack of randomized outcome data and the potential for problem/alcoholic drinking.

Research; Alcohol and Cardiovascular Health. James H. O’Keefe; Kevin A. Bybee; Carl J. Lavie. J Am Colledge of Cardiology.  2007;50(11) ©2007 Elsevier Science, Inc.
          Under the Influence: A Guide to the Myths and Realities of Alcoholism
by James Robert Milam, Katherine Ketcham

Read more about this title…

Related Reading:

The Easy Way to Stop Drinking
Drinking: A Love Story
Facing Love Addiction: Giving Yourself the Power to Change the Way You Love
Breaking the Power of Natural Law: How to Be Free of Sickness, Disease, Addiction & Depression by Walking in God's Commandments & Abinding in His Pres
Allen Carr's Easyway to Control Alcohol