My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

To think the alcohol unit levels....

65 replies

Windingstreamswithoutends · 22/12/2015 17:56

...Are so low it means they have to be virtually ignored if you wish to drink alcohol.

For women it's 2-3 units in a day. Which is a glass of wine. Therefore if you have 2 glasses of wine with dinner, even if you are totally sober, you are technically binge drinking with all the stigma and worry that attaches itself to that.

The number of units decided upon as safe is also completely arbitrary and not based on any actual evidence.

These two things together surely mean they are likely to be ignored if you like a drink as they simply cannot be comfortably adhered to.

AIBU to think they should make them more workable to make them more effective?

OP posts:
Report
wasonthelist · 22/12/2015 18:10

YANBU. Not sure what the answer is - to listen to some people you think exposure to the smoke from a cigarette 200 metres away would kill everyone instantly - so we end up with a "limit" when real life doesn't work like that.

I know people who drink and smoke to excess with no major health problems (some quite old) and some who have led "healthy" lifestyles who have crippling health problems - sadly it's not so simple (as you say) - but if we have to be advised on "safe" limits, they are always going to look daft in some cases.

Report
VegetablEsoup · 22/12/2015 18:11

yabu
the recommended levels are there for health reasons.

Report
ThroughThickAndThin01 · 22/12/2015 18:15

YANBU

Different countries have different guidelines, so nothing is conclusive.

It would be good if there became a worldwide., researched guide.

Report
DinoSnores · 22/12/2015 18:17

Ah, the Mumsnet approach to stats!

Right, what is clear that on a population level, those who on average drink more than a certain amount have more problems than those who don't that can be associated with alcohol. Let's pick cirrhosis as our example.

What no one can tell you though is your individual risk. Is your liver particularly robust or delicate so that you can drink plenty without problems, or, as in many of the patients we are seeing now with alcohol-related problems, do small but regular amounts of alcohol cause you more problems?

All that health education can do is tell you the population risk and advise what might a safer level of alcohol and then you need to take some personal responsibility for your actions and their outcomes.

Making them "more workable" does just sound like you want to ignore them (that's fine, that's your right) but want to be made to feel better about it.

Report
ItsAllGoingToBeFine · 22/12/2015 18:18

YABU. Alcohol is not necessary to life. Why do you need to drink more than a glass, or indeed any, alcohol with your meal?

Feel free to ignore the guidelines, your health, your choice.

Report
wasonthelist · 22/12/2015 18:20

Didn't some studies suggest that moderate consumption can be beneficial?

Report
Whatsinaname2011 · 22/12/2015 18:20

Yabu drinking isn't compulsory.

Report
cashewnutty · 22/12/2015 18:33

There will be no point to this thread as all the non-drinkers or 'have a tiny sherry once a year' drinkers will come on to say how unreasonable you are and all the 'enjoy a few glasses of wine each evening' drinkers will stay well away!

Report
MissAlabamaWhitman · 22/12/2015 18:38

It's simple.

You're not supposed to 'like a drink'

You're supposed to have a glass, screw the lid back on the bottle and pop it back in the fridge/ rack.

(You're an adult. You don't have to do what you're supposed to)

Report
Cellardoor1 · 22/12/2015 18:38

ItsAllGoingToBeFine I take it you survive on a diet of gruel and water seeing as most things beyond that aren't "necessary to life"?

I'm sure you don't, because things like tea, chocolate, fried chips and alcohol may not be needed to survive but they are tasty and enjoyable and perfectly safe in moderation.

Report
TheBunnyOfDoom · 22/12/2015 18:41

You won't be totally sober after two glasses of wine, though. You might feel okay, but your reactions will be delayed and you'll be over the drink-drive limit.

Assuming you don't drink everyday, two glasses of wine with dinner a few times of week is not a problem. The guidelines are just guidelines, and the units are there to give you an idea of how much you're drinking. Drinking two glasses of wine on a Friday night does NOT make you a binge drinker.

Report
Wolfiefan · 22/12/2015 18:41

You can choose to ignore the guidelines.
You can choose to strictly adhere to them.
You can choose to mostly follow them.

They are recommendations to try and keep people healthy. If you have two glasses of wine the alcohol police won't come and get you. If you drink a bottle a night you are chancing your health.
You're a grown up. You choose.
You can't have guidelines changed because you think they are too low.

Report
TheSecondViola · 22/12/2015 18:42

Its not need, its want. I want to drink wine, and beer, and gin.
The guidelines may be there to improve national health but they don't have a lot of grounding in reality. Like op says, two glasses of wine and technically you're a binge drinker. And someone who drinks ten pints and six tequilas is also a binge drinker. It makes a nonsense of categorisation, like putting someone a few pounds over weight in with people who can't leave their house because they can't fit through the door.
Which makes it all more than a little pointless.

I drink more than the guidelines. I'm fine with it. If it shortens my life I'm OK with that too, I have no interest in living a long and alcohol free life. My choice. Make your own.

Report
Alisvolatpropiis · 22/12/2015 18:42

The unit levels themselves are arbitrary, I remember reading an article a doctor had written saying there had to be a limit, so one was chosen.

Report
ItsAllGoingToBeFine · 22/12/2015 18:43

Cellar but it is not against the law to drink alcohol. If you want to, you do, the government has simply issued health guidelines outlining what a moderate amount if alcohol is, they don't enforce these guidelines in any way.

There are also guidelines about fried food and chocolate, which people can choose.to ignore or not at their risk.

Report
Wolpertinger · 22/12/2015 18:45

Making them 'more workable' sounds like you'd just like to change the laws of medicine to suit how much you, personally, would like to drink.

Sadly it doesn't work that way. If you want to drink in excess of the guidelines, please do so, but be aware there is a risk. Alcoholic liver disease in women and middle class social drinkers who never get drunk is increasing - as wine glasses have increased in size and drinking in the home has increased. It's not just done to be spoilsports.

I also love the idea that the units were made up just to annoy you and not on the basis of any research at all Hmm

And on that note, I shall have a glass of wine.

Report
Pointlessfan · 22/12/2015 18:48

I don't drink at all most days of the week but usually have a couple of drinks on Friday and Saturday. Over Christmas I expect I shall drink slightly more than usual. I'm not going to worry about it, it will balance out with all the days and sometimes whole weeks when I don't drink at all.

Report
EvaBING · 22/12/2015 18:48

YANBU - Their recommendations are ridiculous.

Report
enderwoman · 22/12/2015 18:50

I thought that the recommendation was weekly so 10 units once a week was fine - 3 units daily was not.

Report
OwlinaTree · 22/12/2015 18:51

I agree OP, and have had this conversation many times. The limit is so low that it is impossible to stick to on a night out, so you end up in the 'in for a penny, in for a pound' mindset.

For me, a big night out followed by 6 nights dry is much more workable than a dribble of wine every day!

Surely a safe limit would be none. Any alcohol is probably unadvisable for health, same as ectascy and cigarettes. This 2 units a day is daft and useless IMHO.

Report
TheSecondViola · 22/12/2015 18:57

Not at all, alcohol can be very good for you. Red wine etc.

Report
OwlinaTree · 22/12/2015 19:20

Yes but a thimble full would probably do that job viola, not a pleasant amount!

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Babycham1979 · 22/12/2015 19:20

Well, alcohol units might not be made up, but recommended limits are;

news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/8172982.stm

All those puritans out there should also note the moderate-to-regular drinkers live, on average, longer than non-drinkers.

Furthermore, despite our media and government's obsession with 'booze Britain', we are way down the league of boozers, internationally;

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_alcohol_consumption_per_capita

Report
HermioneWeasley · 22/12/2015 19:28

well a unit is what it is

I don't know how the weekly recommended limits were established, but more than a glass of wine a day and a couple more at weekends doesn't seem "not even worth it to me".

If you really feel you want or need to drink more than that on a regular basis it sounds like a dependency issue.

Report
Trills · 22/12/2015 19:28

DinoSnores thank you. V good post.

Similarly with BMI.
It's a population level metric.
You might know a rugby player who is super-fit and labelled obese, but if the number of adults in the UK who are obese is rising you can bet it's not because we're all turning into rugby players.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.