Sunday, January 5, 2025

Want to cut back on alcohol? You may see conflicting advice on low-risk drink limits

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TORONTO — As some people try to cut down their drinking and embrace Dry January, they may look to Canada’s health agencies for guidance — and find some conflicting advice.

This week, the Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research launched a website where users can calculate their health risks — including cancer, heart disease and stroke — based on the amount of alcohol they consume.

The website is built on guidelines issued two years ago by the government-supported Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction (CCSA), which said the risk of cancer rises at much lower levels of alcohol consumption than previously thought. Any more than two standard drinks a week puts people at higher risk, it said in its report.

However, Health Canada has not adopted the changes the CCSA released in January 2023. It still advises Canadians to limit their drinks to 10 per week for women and 15 per week for men — an amount that the CCSA says puts someone at “increasingly high risk” of developing serious illness, including breast and colon cancer.

Health Canada’s guide has been in place since 2011 and the government is sticking with it, the office of the federal minister of mental health and addictions told The Canadian Press Thursday.

Dr. Timothy Naimi, director of the Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research at the University of Victoria, said the conflicting guidance “has been an ongoing issue for the public health community and scientists” for the last two years.

Naimi was one of the researchers involved in developing the CCSA’s updated guidelines and led the creation of the new website — knowalcohol.ca — that allows people to calculate their risk and the positive impact of reducing their alcohol consumption.

Both the Health Canada and the CCSA guidelines say the only zero-risk approach to alcohol is not to drink it at all.

“Alcohol remains the leading preventable cause of health and social problems in Canada,” said Naimi.

“I think a lot of Canadians have been interested in drinking less. But if you look at it, governments haven’t really followed suit with the kind of policies that would help people drink less, you know, sort of guide them in that direction.”

Alcohol is a Group 1 carcinogen, according to the International Agency for Research on Cancer, placing it in the same category as tobacco smoke and asbestos, along with more than 100 other substances.

On Friday, the U.S. Surgeon General called for more public awareness about the link between alcohol and cancer, including warning labels on alcohol bottles and containers.

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