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Why a glass of wine can do more harm than you realise



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Published Date: 21 May 2008
IT is an image which strikes horror into the hearts of most parents – teenagers in the street knocking back bottles of Buckfast. But how many parents realise the wine they drink at home may be every bit as powerful as the drink of choice of young yobs?
While Buckfast contains 15 per cent alcohol, many of the nation's favourite wines are now every bit as strong.

Take Papavero Primitivo 2006 – the best-selling red for one leading internet wine seller, Direct Wines Ltd. It contains 14 per cent alco
hol. Some popular wines, such as Australian Zinfandel, a particularly robust red at 16 per cent, contain more alcohol than Buckfast.

It highlights a problem which is causing growing concern among health professionals – widespread ignorance about the amount of alcohol we actually drink.

A YouGov poll released this week has found that many who consider themselves moderate drinkers are unaware of the high levels of alcohol in their drinks, because measures are getting larger while beers and wines are getting stronger.

The poll comes after the Scottish Government warned alcohol misuse is costing Scotland £2.25 billion a year – more than double previous estimates – and is hitting business, the NHS, social services, police and courts.

While Zinfandel is at the higher end of the scale most bottles available in any supermarket or wine merchant are around 13 per cent.

David Henderson, a wine merchant of 25 years' experience and owner of Henderson's Wines in Morningside, is finding it increasingly difficult to find bottles of a more moderate strength.

He said: "I regularly get comments from discerning, educated wine drinkers who feel that they can't handle a bottle of 14 per cent.

"Yet I've been on wine-tasting trips to meet growers who say most people are only interested in wine that packs as much alcohol in the bottle as possible.
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"In my experience people just have no idea how much alcohol they are drinking, and there are quite a few misconceptions out there. Some people believe white isn't as strong as red, or that a bottle of rosé is less potent than a full-bodied wine."

The confusion is heightened for some shoppers as many of the most popular websites selling wine don't provide information about the alcoholic strength.

Jack Law, chief executive of Alcohol Focus Scotland, said growing numbers of middle-aged drinkers risk damaging their health by drinking too much at home.

He added: "Older drinkers may drink at home rather than in pubs or clubs, and it's easy to get into the habit of having a few glasses of wine each night to 'relax'. Home measures tend to be far bigger than pub measures so a vodka, whisky or gin at home could be the equivalent of a double or treble in a bar. It's worth remembering that it's adults who are more likely to be hospitalised or attend a counselling service because of their drinking."

Tom Wood, chairman of Action on Alcohol and Drugs in Edinburgh, says many people believe there's only one unit of alcohol in a glass of wine, a pint of beer or a measure of spirits. He says: "There is indeed only one unit of alcohol in a glass of wine – provided it's a 125ml glass of wine with eight per cent alcohol.

"However, glasses of wine are now usually served in 250ml measures of between 12 and 14 per cent, so a glass of wine is now around three units of alcohol.

"It's important to educate people on these points. Some people may be under the impression that it is not that bad to have two or three glasses of wine regularly.

"The health service has now picked up on the fact that a lot of people are sleepwalking into serious health problems.

"These people may not be falling down in the gutter in a pool of vomit, but their health is being eroded in a very quiet and insidious way. They are risking long-term damage to their vital organs – including the liver, heart and cardiovascular system – and may pay the price through premature ageing and failing liver function."

Dalkeith GP Dr Dean Marshall, chairman of the BMA's Scottish General Practitioners Committee, said the problem is made worse by patients who misrepresent their alcohol intake in the patient surveys they take when registering with GPs.

He said: "According to these surveys I've never met anyone who smokes more than 20 a day, but this is quite clearly not the case and these surveys also reveal a similar ignorance about alcohol.

"What some people regard as one unit of alcohol is in fact two or three, so people may not necessarily be lying about their intake but may be unaware of how much they are consuming.

"For this reason the Department of Health in England is going to start paying GPs to carry out in-depth alcohol surveys, and is giving them the resources to compile the information more effectively.

"In Scotland a lot of money is poured into alcohol programmes but because there are so many groups focusing on alcohol, and receiving funds, the Scottish Government believes the message is getting through, whereas I think the money may be better spent by empowering GPs to carry out these kinds of studies."





The full article contains 891 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 21 May 2008 3:06 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Alcohol & binge drinking
 
1

,

21/05/2008 11:31:57
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

Alternative (High Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 21/05/2008 12:16:53
Buckfast is more or less the same strength as a good Chardonnay or Claret.

Oh what a surprise. How amazing.

Why don't these nannies mind their own business?
3

Edin,

21/05/2008 13:10:55
Banana Heid "You dont touch the stuff during the week"???????? That makes you a binge drinker which is even worse. ANNDDDDDD a higher percentage of wine does not make it better . full stop !!!!!!!!!
4

it has always been allan,

21/05/2008 18:53:52
This government is really communist by another name.

when they monitor all our calls they will also be watching our other habits.

there will be a device to CCTV us when we watch television and other devices to record our nocturnal habits and our thoughts because chairman brown does'nt like to miss any opportunities before he is voted out if he ever calls an election
5

Pipe smoker,

Montrose 22/05/2008 11:19:06
The congenial practice of having a few glasses, or more, of one's favourite tipple to relax, precede/accompany a meal or act as digestif/night cap/lubricant for civilized conviviality and merriment (obviously one holds no brief for barbarous behaviour)has been entrenched in European culture for millennia, whatsoever the alleged dangers may be. It would be wonderful if the tiresome, boring teetotal lobby would stop their near-paranoid,hysterical, puritanical outpourings of concern.
6

The Genuine Mario Antoinette,

22/05/2008 11:30:27
I think its our patronising media that makes us drink.

Wine can be strong folks , you heard it here.
7

ejstubbs,

Edinburgh 22/05/2008 13:37:13
According to this article http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/food_and_drink/article2697975.ece in the Times last year, there is no good scientific basis for the current recommended limits anyway. Although it is undoubtedly sensible to be aware how much alcohol you are consuming, there doesn't seem to be much point in being particularly rigorous in monitoring your intake against limits which were nothing more than "a sort of intelligent guess by a committee" working on the basis that "we don’t really have any data whatsoever".
8

Dooogie,

Highland 25/05/2008 07:19:37
At one time, Guinness ran an advertising jingle "Guinness gives you strength". It's amazing to see how "strong" someone thinks they are after a few pints, while staring at what used to be a kebab and hanging onto a lamp post.
Most Multi-National drinks companies are making obscene profits from people's addictions, and governments are happy to collect the tax revenues accruing from same.
There is a proper place for social drinking in our society, but our booze-culture needs to change to redress the costs in human misery.
9

celtic4,

USA 03/06/2008 05:08:32
I do not drink. But I must say that red wine is totally good for the heart, if kept at one glass per day. Of course, if I were to drink that much, I wouldn't be able to balance my checkbook. But wine,in moderate amount, is good for the heart. The same cannot be said of beer or ale. These are not only addictive, but fattening. Hear the obese calling do you? Ever wonder about that?
Of course, I am not saying that all Scottish people are alcoholics. I am just attempting to make the point that some wine is healthy. But not when nine year olds drink it naturally.
10

Daniel Salaman,

05/06/2008 19:45:15
We all know for a fact that older people, suffer quite a lot of stress due to depression, along with many other individual and personal factors that come quite natural with ageing. Old people who stay at home its quite easy for them to turn to alcohol, in order to lift their spirits, it makes them feel a little more happy to accept the life of a pensioner, who no longer plays a vital role in life. However. we also have a second category of old people who are turning to medical depression pills prescribed by their JPs. We have also the third category of old people, who are consuming alcohol and depression drugs, which is extremely dangerous for their health. Of course a very big number of old people pay very little attention to the dangers of taking together alcohol and drugs. I think that two glasses of red wine in the evening with a light meal on a daily basis is perfectly healthy for every one of us.

 

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