this post was submitted on 15 Aug 2023
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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (5 children)

Problem with these is they state some tiny amount equivalent to like half a glass of wine as the most you should have in a day, even though in the real world.. basically anyone who drinks has a at least a little bit more than that and the moderate majority are fine and not on death's door. I know 70 and 80 year olds in the pub who must drink 10+ units a day (I actually notice the oldies are the worst for wanting like 6%+ ABV beers) and are still there doing fine. So it has a bit of a "boy who cried wolf" effect to slap warnings on about drinking more than 14 units a week / 2 a day / whatever when at least in the UK like "everyone" drinks more than that. It just becomes a lauging stock, "look at that silly over-cautious nanny label". If there should be any warning, IMO it'd be not to binge. If you can't remember what happened the next morning, you drank too much, and it's if you do that too often that it's a major health risk.

Drinking more than these labelled amounts isn't good for you, but health warnings should be more closely aligned to "really bad for you" to be taken seriously imo.

[–] [email protected] -3 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Well, because even those tiny amounts have a negative effect on your body. Instead of laughing about it, maybe you should consider, that you and everyone around you consumes too much alcohol? It's exactly the 1 beer a day, that leads to addiction (and, possibly, cancer).

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

He's talking about how the standard unit of alcohol definition bears no resemblance to anything people actually interact with in the real world. For example, one unit of alcohol is ~200mL of a typical beer. When was the last time you saw beer sold in 200mL containers?

He is saying that if you want to communicate such ideas to people you need to speak to them at their level, not something geared towards scientists. If you ask random people on the street how much beer one drink is, they will likely tell you it is one pint (473mL), when in reality that is more than two drinks.

And when one finds out that, they are not going to reel in horror, they are going to laugh at how out of touch someone was to communicate that idea so poorly.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

More specifically (btw pint = 568ml) when I said about laughing at it I meant more at how it's so little you might as well not drink at all. Which I get is their point as this poster obviously loathes alcohol and thinks it's the most dangerous thing in the world, but yet we're not all dropping left and right as you'd expect. If it was that dangerous the UK population would've been wiped out by now.

No one, literally no one, goes out and has half a pint then says "well the label says that's too much so I'm off home". That's where, right or wrong, the suggestion is kind of laughable.

It's an ideal, perhaps. But it's such a tight ideal that no one will even try to follow it. Maybe if they aimed for "better" rather than "almost perfect" (with perfection being teetotality) they'd have more success. A label more like "if you can't remember what happened when you wake up tomorrow, you're severely harming your health" would at least get some of those in the biggest danger to rein it in a bit.

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