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Including moderate drinking in your lifestyle
http://www.addictioninfo.org/articles/2048/1/Including-moderate-drinking-in-your-lifestyle/Page1.html
Misc Author
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By Misc Author
Published on 11/26/2007
 

Moderate drinking seems to raise HDL (“good”) cholesterol, helping reduce the risk for heart disease and possibly stroke, a study from Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston indicates. Alcohol also makes blood platelets less sticky, so they’re less likely to form into potential heart-attack-inducing clots.


Drink to your health

By Elisa Kronish, SELF.com

Attention, wine (and beer and martini) lovers: After years of flip-flopping, research seems to be settling in alcohol’s favor.

“The healthiest people do include moderate drinking in their lifestyle,” says Eric Rimm, Sc.D., associate professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston.

You can reap alcohol’s health benefits within weeks, and the gains accumulate over time. (Stick to one drink a day, and fewer than seven a week.)

Raise your glass and say cheers….

To your heart!

Moderate drinking seems to raise HDL (“good”) cholesterol, helping reduce the risk for heart disease and possibly stroke, a study from Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston indicates.

Alcohol also makes blood platelets less sticky, so they’re less likely to form into potential heart-attack-inducing clots.

To your pancreas!

Enjoying a drink a day may help regulate insulin (and, therefore, blood sugar) levels, lowering your risk for type 2 diabetes, according to a study in the journal Obesity.

It appears that alcohol can increase cells’ sensitivity to insulin, which in turn allows cells to burn glucose faster and reduce blood sugar levels.

To your joints!

Indulging in three or more spirits a week could protect against rheumatoid arthritis, research presented at the European Congress of Rheumatology in Barcelona suggests.

Scientists report that alcohol may dampen inflammation and suppress the body’s immune response that can lead to the often painful condition.

To feeling great all around!

Women who imbibe alcohol of any kind are twice as likely to report better-than-average health than women who don’t drink at all, researchers at the University of Miami in Coral Gables say.

One possible reason why: Alcohol often goes hand in hand with making strong social connections, which tend to reduce stress. Now that’s worthy of a toast. ¡Salud!

  Booze clues
 
What counts as one drink?

It’s either 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine or 1½ ounces of 80-proof liquor.

Is one type of alcohol better than another?

No. All forms of alcohol have ethanol, the ingredient that adds a health benefit.

Who should steer clear?

Women who have a high risk for breast cancer should have less than one drink a day; there’s evidence that alcohol can raise the odds for some forms of the disease. Those with a family history of alcoholism should avoid alcohol altogether.

Copyright © 2007 CondéNet. All rights reserved.

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See source article:  www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21778634/