Several older studies suggest that taking in one glass of wine per day for women or two glasses of wine per day for men is associated with reduced risk for a heart attack. However, a review of 107 studies involving more than 4.8 million participants found no reduction in death rate for people who drank fewer than two drinks (25 grams) of alcohol per day, and there was an increase in risk of death among female drinkers who drank 25 or more grams per day and male drinkers who drank 45 or more grams per day
Potential Flaws in Studies Suggesting that Light Drinking Reduces Heart Attack Risk
For a study to show that alcohol reduces heart attack risk, it must compare a test group of drinkers with a control group of non-drinkers. The studies that appear to show health benefits from low doses of alcohol may be due to using faulty control groups. Moderate drinkers have been shown to be healthier than non-drinkers because they are usually more highly educated, have more money, are more physically active, are more likely to have health insurance and to eat more vegetables
A study with a 20-year follow-up of 4,028 18-to-64-year-old adults found that when the people who had stopped drinking for medical reasons were removed from the control group, moderate drinkers did not live longer than non-drinkers
No Health Benefits from Low Doses of Alcohol
A recent review of seven studies covering more than 19,000 adults found that taking one alcoholic drink a day for more than four years is associated with a rise in blood pressure, even if these people previously had normal blood pressure
The World Heart Federation reported that taking one drink a day did not help to prevent heart attacks
People who take just one drink a day may be at increased risk for heart disease
Alcohol intake has been linked to increased heart rate, high blood pressure, weakened heart muscle and irregular heartbeats, all of which can increase the risk of heart attacks and strokes
My Recommendations
Many early studies suggested that it is safe for women to take up to one drink per day and for men to take up to two drinks per day. Almost 30 percent of North Americans take in one or more drinks per day. Recent studies suggest that no amount of alcohol may be “safe” or beneficial. Whatever you decide about your own consumption of alcohol, do not base your decision on information from the alcoholic beverage industry. Occasional drinking probably will not harm you, but drinking alcohol daily may increase your risk for heart attacks and strokes.