Photo by Fred Moon on Unsplash
Photo by Fred Moon on Unsplash

The maximum amount of alcohol we should be drinking has dropped

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Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

Adult Australians should be limiting their alcohol consumption to no more than 10 standard drinks a week, according to revised guidelines that previously recommended a maximum of 14 standard drinks a week. In this paper, Aussie experts explain the research behind recent revisions to the National Health and Medical Research Council's alcohol guidelines. The revised guidelines also recommend that women who are pregnant, planning to become pregnant or breastfeeding should avoid alcohol entirely, as should anyone under 18 years of age.

Journal/conference: Medical Journal of Australia

Link to research (DOI): 10.5694/mja2.51336

Organisation/s: The University of Sydney, The University of Adelaide, The University of Melbourne, Menzies School of Health Research, The University of New South Wales, Queensland University of Technology, Monash University, Telethon Kids Institute, NHMRC, Australian National University

Funder: Katherine Conigrave was supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Practitioner Fellowship (APP1117582). Michael Livingston and Tanya Chikritzhs were supported by National Drug Research Institute core funding from the Australian Government under the Drug and Alcohol Program and from Curtin University, Western Australia. The NHMRC supported the guidelines development process, including remuneration for committee meeting attendance, and approved a draft of this guideline summary before submission.

Media release

From: Medical Journal of Australia

NATIONAL ALCOHOL GUIDELINES CLARIFY MESSAGE TO DRINKERS: DO IT LESS

DOCTORS, other busy health professionals and members of the public can struggle to keep up with evolving health guidance. Late in 2020, the National Health and Medical Research Council released its latest Guidelines to reduce health risks from drinking alcohol. These lowered the recommended maximum that health adults Australians should drink over a week from 14 standard drinks to 10. The guidelines also advised pregnant or breastfeeding women, as well as young people aged under 18 years, to avoid alcohol altogether.

A guideline summary published today in the Medical Journal of Australia reviews the logic and the evidence behind the revisions. The authors of the article include the members of the national committee responsible for revising these guidelines on alcohol consumption. The authors set out a summary of the rigorous 4-year process of evidence review that underpinned the finished product. They describe the current guidelines, including how and why they differ from the previous, 2009, guidelines.

That extensive evidence review considered both health harms and potential health benefits of drinking alcohol.
The guidelines now state unequivocally that for healthy adults “the less you drink, the lower your risk of harm from alcohol”. This statement was added “to clarify that any level of drinking can convey some risk of harm”, wrote the authors of the summary, led by Professor Katherine Conigrave, a Senior Staff Specialist at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Sydney, and the University of Sydney.

The three recommendations are:
• Guideline 1: “To reduce the risk of harm from alcohol-related disease or injury, healthy men and women should drink no more than ten standard drinks a week and no more than four standard drinks on any one day. The less you drink, the lower your risk of harm from alcohol.”
• Guideline 2: “To reduce the risk of injury and other harms to health, children and people under 18 years of age should not drink alcohol.”
• Guideline 3: “To prevent harm from alcohol to their unborn child, women who are pregnant or planning a pregnancy should not drink alcohol. For women who are breastfeeding, not drinking alcohol is safest for their baby.”

“Furthermore, individuals with health conditions are again advised to seek medical advice on drinking. Forpregnancy, breastfeeding and people aged under 18 years, the guidance not to drink alcohol was made clearer.”
 

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