No amount of alcohol is ‘safe’, experts have warned.
World Health Organization (WHO) researchers accepted that drinking may provide some ‘small’ health benefits, such as a lowering the risk of heart disease and type 2 diabetes.
But the team argued these are clearly outweighed by booze’s adverse effects.
Excessive alcohol consumption can permanently damage the liver and cause cancer, they warned.
Researchers from WHO warned that alcohol use is among the leading risk factors for premature mortality and disability, with younger people disproportionately affected
But critics today slammed the message, accusing the authors of ‘demonising alcohol’ and publishing with ‘insufficient evidence’.
It comes as millions are attempting to give their bodies a break from booze and go cold turkey on alcohol during ‘Dry January’.
Leading experts have rowed about the harms of moderate drinking for decades.
Studies have suggested that a glass of wine or pint of beer a day can stave off a host of illnesses.
While others have argued that even light drinking is dangerous.
The WHO estimates that excessive alcohol consumption kills 3million people around the world each year.
Writing in The Lancet Public Health, the team of WHO experts said that ‘alcohol consumption’ as a whole was behind the the toll.
Their comment — not published as a WHO-endorsed statement — was not based on new research.
Instead, it was published as a comment, using various old studies to justify their position.
The team said some studies have suggested that light alcohol consumption ‘could have a small protective effect’.
But they claimed no studies have shown this also ‘reduces the risk of cancer for an individual consumer’.
And protective effects of moderate consumption ‘disappear with heavy episodic drinking’, they claimed.
‘As such, no safe amount of alcohol consumption for cancers and health can be established,’ they concluded.
‘Alcohol consumers should be objectively informed about the risks of cancer and other health conditions associated with alcohol consumption.’
The NHS recommends people do not drink more than 14 units a week and to spread them over three days or more.
Meanwhile, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advises that Americans do not drink more than 14 standard alcohol drinks per week for men and seven for women.
Ian Hamilton, an addiction expert at the University of York, told MailOnline that the WHO experts are ‘correct’ that there is ‘no safe level’ in terms of risks to health.
However, he added that it was ‘important to stress’ that by sticking to the guidelines the risk to health is ‘small’.
The risk of developing alcohol related diseases, is ‘greatest for those who consume large amounts in a small period of time’, he added.
Mr Hamilton said: ‘Ensuring that everyone understands the risks associated with their consumption is important but for those drinking occasionally and low quantities the risks to their health are small.’
Meanwhile, Christopher Snowdon, head of lifestyle economics at the Institute of Economic Affairs think-tank, criticised the paper.
He told MailOnline: ‘In its efforts to demonise alcohol, the WHO speculates there to be “no safe level” of drinking for a few forms of cancer.
‘It admits that there is insufficient evidence to support this.
‘There is, however, a huge amount of evidence built up over decades showing that moderate drinking significantly reduces the risk of heart disease, stroke, diabetes and dementia.’
He added: ‘On average, moderate drinkers live longer than teetotallers, so if moderate drinking is risky enough to worry about, the risks of not drinking at all must be terrifying.’
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