Abstaining from alcohol for just one month as part of 'Dry January' can offer meaningful physical and psychological ...
A YouGov survey shows continuing demand for low and no-alcohol drinks as more UK adults choose moderate consumption. The ...
Even among those who still drink, habits are changing. Younger adults tend to consume alcohol less frequently and in smaller quantities than older generations. Industry research from IWSR indicates ...
Dry January is the practice of not drinking for the first month of the new year. But where did the practice come from?
Alcohol use in South Asians in the UK is under-recognised, and alcohol related harm is disproportionately high, warn researchers in an editorial published on BMJ.com today. They argue that some ...
Dry January participants saw liver fat drop 15% and blood sugar fall 23% in one study. Six months later, they were still ...
In fact, your entire body might benefit. That’s because alcohol speeds up how quickly you age, sending you hurtling towards ...
The UK’s Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC) has responded to reports it is planning to allow alcohol-free beers to contain a higher alcohol by volume (ABV) content. In correspondence with ...
Harry Sumnall receives and has received funding from grant awarding bodies for alcohol and other drug research. He sits on grant-awarding funding panels, and is an unpaid scientific adviser to the ...
The UK government has issued new guidelines on alcohol, saying any amount will increase the risk for cancer. The advice says people who drink regularly should not consume more than 14 units of alcohol ...