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Wine vs. Health in 2019 (The State of Wine As We Know It)

Each year a fresh set of stories about wine and health is published. While we don’t like to admit it, most of these headlines are taken at face value:

“A glass of wine is worth an hour at the gym.”

“Extra glass of wine a day ‘will shorten your life by 30 minutes.'”

These are actual headlines.

Suddenly, more of us choose to drink wine instead of go to the gym. Or, in the latter example, more of us conclude that wine is a death sentence. Oh my!

Health Benefits of Wine Compared to Scientifically Proven Health Benefits

Time to hit the brakes. Let’s look at the topic of wine and health and where we stand in 2019.

TLDR: Two new, reputable medical studies on wine and health use big data to show that moderate drinking is best – if you drink.

On Wine vs. Death

In 2019, life still comes with a 100% risk of death. So, the question is more about how much wine increases our basic risk of dropping dead at any moment.

(long awkward pause…)

Two studies came out last year looking at alcohol consumption by crunching many (hundreds) of cohort studies with big data-style statistical analysis.

Drink Wine for Science Poster by Wine Folly - original 2012
Technically, drinking wine for science is unethical.

The reason none of these studies are direct is because asking people to drink wine for science is unethical. (For shame, I tell you!)


Alcohol Consumption Visualization Infographic Chart by Wine Folly - Interpreted From The Lancet

The first study showed that if you’re over 40 and routinely drink two or more glasses of wine a day, your risk of death increases by 20%. Oh no!

Oddly enough, the study also showed a bizarre correlation among non-drinkers, ex-drinkers, and moderate drinkers (those drinking just one glass of wine a day). Those who drank one glass of wine a day had a lower risk than a non-drinker and an ex-drinker of dying.

(BTW, there were many possible reasons for this… check this chart image for more detail).

On Wine vs. Disease

The second study showed how drinking increases general risk of disease. It measured outcomes of 23 disease conditions (including things like breast cancer and tuberculosis) and their relationship to alcohol use.

Relative Disease Risk Based on Daily Alcohol Consumption - The Lancet Data - Infographic by Wine Folly

The study is fancy (i.e. it’s very hard to read) and was funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. In fact, it was one of the most cited studies in 2018. The most damaging thing in the study states:

“Our results show that the safest level of drinking is none.”

But wait! When we look at the absolute risk of this study (shared by British Statistician, David Spiegelhalter) we can see that risk increase is not significant for moderate drinkers:

Absolute vs. Relative Risk of Getting a Disease Based on Daily Alcohol Consumption - Chart by Wine Folly - Data From The Lancet

  • If you drink zero drinks per day, your absolute risk of developing a health problem is 0.914%.
  • If you drink one drink per day, your absolute risk of developing a health problem is 0.918% more (0.44% more than non-drinkers).
  • If you drink two drinks per day, your absolute risk of developing a health problem is 0.977% (7% more than non-drinkers).
  • If you drink five drinks per day (1 bottle of wine), your absolute risk of developing a health problem is 1.25% (37% more than non-drinkers).

So, the conclusion made in the Bill and Melinda Gates study seems a bit extreme. An increased risk of 0.44% for having one drink per day is insignificant.

How Many of Us Are Actually Drinking in Moderation? Data: The Lancet - Chart by Wine Folly
Is it easier to change policies than it is to teach people how to be responsible drinkers? This chart suggests we have our work cut out for us.

That said, if you’re a health-policy maker, the numbers look much scarier at scale. On a country-wide level, you’re dealing with the risk (and cost) of alcohol abusers (those five drink per day-ers), along with everyone else. Let’s not forget drunk drivers and people who cause crimes of aggression while drinking.

(Yep, I know. They’re ruining it for the rest of us!)

Conclusion Time

The two recent studies using big data analytics showed that moderate drinking (one glass of wine a day–regardless of sex) has an insignificant level of risk associated with it.

We also learned that drinking a bottle of wine by yourself in a day is still a terrible idea.

What was annoying about these studies was that none of them separated wine drinkers from other alcoholic beverage drinkers. This is a problem because wine is often singled out in other studies due to how it performs differently – better – than other alcoholic drinks.

Final conclusion: If you want to be healthier, you might reduce your wine consumption to a glass of wine a day.

Opinion Time

Unfortunately, the overall mood in the studies this year was pretty somber. The conclusions are generally negative towards alcohol use – possibly to encourage or justify future policy changes.

One thing is for certain, though. All of this slogging through medical documents has given me a strong thirst…

Have something to add? Check out the sources (if you dare) and leave a comment below!

Sources

  • "Risk thresholds for alcohol consumption: combined analysis of individual-participant data for 599 912 current drinkers in 83 prospective studies." The Lancet.
  • "Alcohol use and burden for 195 countries and territories, 1990–2016: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016" The Lancet.
  • We can thank the snarky British statistician named David Spiegelhalter for collecting all the absolute risks for alcohol consumption on the Wine vs. Disease article here.
  • Let's hand it to Katherine Ellen Foley and Elijah Wolfson for crunching the data in "Margin of Inebriation" at Qz.com. Some of the data, we've re-compiled and visualized for this article.
  • Current CDC Fact Sheet on moderate drinking (pulled 1/14/2019).
  • Be a smarter stat reader! Learn about the difference between absolute and relative risk and the need to display both in any academic study.
  • The neural correlates of alcohol-related aggression. Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Science.

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