Answer: None. And the answer was arrived at by a number of massive studies, reviews of past studies, and an analysis of hundreds of databases. (So not a couple of slanted studies.)
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To minimize health risks, the optimal amount of alcohol someone should consume is none. That’s the simple, surprising conclusion of a massive study, co-authored by 512 researchers from 243 institutions, published Thursday in the Lancet.
The researchers built a database of more than a thousand alcohol studies and data sources, as well as death and disability records from 195 countries and territories between 1990 and 2016. The goal was to estimate how much alcohol affects the risk of 23 health problems. The number that jumped out, in the end, was zero. Anything more than that was associated with health risks.
Safest level of alcohol consumption is none, study finds
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This should end the "Drinking is good for you" debate once and for all.
Sent from my Pixel 2 XL
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To minimize health risks, the optimal amount of alcohol someone should consume is none. That’s the simple, surprising conclusion of a massive study, co-authored by 512 researchers from 243 institutions, published Thursday in the Lancet.
The researchers built a database of more than a thousand alcohol studies and data sources, as well as death and disability records from 195 countries and territories between 1990 and 2016. The goal was to estimate how much alcohol affects the risk of 23 health problems. The number that jumped out, in the end, was zero. Anything more than that was associated with health risks.
Safest level of alcohol consumption is none, study finds
---
This should end the "Drinking is good for you" debate once and for all.
Sent from my Pixel 2 XL