There's One Simple Method to Reduce Alcohol Intake, Scientists Say, And It Works
This particular combo of 'why to reduce' and 'how to reduce' messaging can be useful for promoting good health in a population, the researchers found in a 2021 study.
Too much drinking doesn't just lead to cancer, of course. Overdoing it on the booze is associated with a whole range of problems, including premature death, heart disease, digestive issues, and an increased risk of dementia.
"We found that pairing information about alcohol and cancer with a particular practical action – counting their drinks – resulted in drinkers reducing the amount of alcohol they consumed," said economist and psychologist Simone Pettigrew from The George Institute for Global Health when the findings were announced.
Related:
For the study, three surveys were filled out: 7,995 people completed the first, 4,588 of those people completed the second three weeks later, and 2,687 people finished the final survey three weeks after that.
The participants were split up into different groups and shown different advertisements and messages about drinking.
One combination stood out, compared to a control group: A TV ad linking booze and cancer, together with a suggestion to keep count of your drinks, was one of the most effective at getting people to try and cut down on alcohol intake.
It was also the only combination where people actually did significantly reduce their alcohol consumption over the six weeks.
Other approaches – like encouraging people to decide on a number of drinks and then stick to it – did prompt some of the volunteers to try and cut down, but there was a clear winner based on the people taking part in this research.
"Many people don't know that alcohol is a carcinogen," said Pettigrew. "It's important information that drinkers should have access to. But telling people alcohol causes cancer is just part of the solution – we also need to give them ways to take action to reduce their risk."
Alcohol consumption can be attributed to as many as 7 percent of premature deaths worldwide, according to the World Health Organization, and making drinkers more aware of the health risks is one way of tackling that problem.
While health agencies have also looked at ways of making booze less readily available and more expensive, ultimately, personal choices will determine whether or not behavior around alcohol will shift in the long term.
In this particular study, the participants were chosen to be "broadly demographically representative of the Australian drinking public", so it's not an approach that will necessarily work elsewhere – but it seems that counting your drinks could be one option to try if you want to cut down.
"There are limited resources available for alcohol harm-reduction campaigns, so it's important to find out which messages resonate best to ensure they have the best chance of working," said Pettigrew.
The research was published in Addictive Behaviors.
An earlier version of this article was first published in June 2021.
Related News
Untested Peptide Injections Are Being Sold as 'Next-Gen Biohacks'
People With a Home by The Ocean Live Longer And We Don't Know Why
The Mere Sight of a Sick Person Can Trigger Our Immune System
Solve the daily Crossword
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Fears grow about silent siblings with the rise of social media sperm donations
Changing patterns in fertility rates and how Australian women fall pregnant have raised concerns about the rise of informal sperm donation and a lack of national oversight when it comes to the potential for some men to donate heavily in a concentrated area. For years, women have turned to websites, apps and informal groups on social media to find a potential father for their unborn child. A growing trend of women putting off pregnancy until later in life and shortages of sperm and egg donations at clinics has helped lead to a "boom" in informal sperm donations, says Dr Evie Kendal. "Trying to ban informal sperm donation itself will functionally be impossible," the bioethicist from Swinburne university told Yahoo News Australia. "But we can absolutely educate people about the health risks involved in informal sperms donations ... and we can absolutely consider it the same as other forms of donation in terms of having guidelines regarding the number of families that can perhaps be contributed to from a particular donor." While she admits that is a tall task, when combined with making sperm donation through clinics more accessible, "so that people don't feel like they have to run that risk of using an informal donor", that will go some way to mitigating some of the worst risks. "There's risk of exploitation, there's risk of unsafe practices ... and there's the risk that after the fact the donor that might actually demand parental rights and it might be difficult to prove they had engaged in a donation," Dr Kendal said. Related: Aussie parents call for end to stigma around growing 'triangle families' trend At a more societal level, the public health scientist said it's worrying that a donor could provide sperm to a number of women in a given area, leading to a situation where individuals aren't aware of half-siblings they have in the community. "The problem we're seeing at the moment is a sperm donor being used for too many families and creating many half siblings that are potentially even living in close proximity," Dr Kendal told Yahoo. "So these are children who are potentially growing up together and don't know that they're half siblings. And of course, some of those children may, in the future, actually have romantic relationships with each other, not realising that they're half siblings." It sounds unlikely, but that exact scenario has played out in Victoria recently after one Melbourne man donated sperm to 15 women he met via social media groups and a sperm donation app, The Age reported last month. In total he created 27 half-siblings, some of whom reportedly lived within a few kilometres of each other without realising they were related. There are multiple Facebook groups dedicated for men willing to offer up their sperm to women who want to have babies. While some are state based, the top group – Sperm Donation Australia – has just shy of 22,000 members. It was started by Adam Hooper who did not respond to Yahoo's attempts at contact, but last year told told the ABC his Facebook group "put the idea of men donating on the map". Meanwhile Tinder-style apps like Just a Baby: Become a parent promises to let users swipe through various member profiles so they can; "Find People. Make Babies". While informal sperm donation is perhaps impossible to regulate, experts in the space want to see tougher rules for such online groups and apps. Fertility lawyer Stephen Page, who also sits on the board of the Fertility Society of Australia and New Zealand (FSANZ) has raised the same concerns as Dr Kendal about the potential of multiple half-siblings not knowing about each other. "There's no regulation, you can set up a website, you can set up an app and bang the drum and get men coming along saying that they will be donors," he told the ABC last month. He would like to a see system enforced where donors need to provide formal ID to the admin of such online groups which is passed on to a regulatory authority, and men are monitored for the number of donations. Push for more affordable IVF amid declining fertility rate For many people hoping to become parents, cost-of-living pressures are deterring them from fertility treatment, which in many cases has become increasingly expensive in Australia. The average number of children born per woman was 1.51 in 2024, well below the 1.8 just a decade earlier. With Australia posting a record-low fertility rate in 2024, experts say low-cost IVF options will be crucial to addressing the decline in births. A recent survey by Connect IVF found that almost half of Australians surveyed said fertility services were not affordable, potentially leaving same sex couples and others to seek out alternative options. Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@ You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube.


Boston Globe
6 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Chikungunya spreads in southern China
Chikungunya is a disease caused by a virus of the same name. The chikungunya virus was first identified in people sickened during an outbreak in Tanzania in 1952. Its name is derived from a word in the Makonde language, which means 'that which bends up,' due to the severe pain it can cause. Chikungunya is transmitted by infected mosquitoes and mostly causes mild symptoms. The majority of people who get chikungunya recover without needing medical attention after one to two weeks. Advertisement What are the symptoms of chikungunya? Chikungunya typically produces symptoms including fever, muscle pain, nausea, fatigue, and a rash. But in rare cases, it can cause debilitating joint pain that persists for months or even years. Patients who get severely ill often require hospitalization because of the risk of organ damage. The World Health Organization says severe cases and deaths are rare and mostly occur in babies or elderly people with underlying health conditions. Is there a treatment or vaccine? There is no specific treatment for chikungunya, but health workers can treat the symptoms by giving medicines to lower fevers or ease muscle pain. Two vaccines have been approved in several regions, including Britain, Brazil, Canada, and Europe. Those are mostly targeted at travelers and are not widely available in the countries most affected by chikungunya. Where does chikungunya normally occur? Chikungunya causes regular outbreaks in Africa, Asia, and the Americas, with occasional small epidemics in Europe. Advertisement As of July, there have been about 240,000 cases of chikungunya, including 90 deaths in 16 countries, according to the European Centres for Disease Prevention and Control. The countries that reported the highest number of infections were Brazil, Bolivia, Argentina, and Peru. What's happening in China? With thousands of confirmed cases, this appears to be the biggest chikungunya outbreak ever documented in China, according to César López-Camacho of the University of Oxford. 'What makes this event notable is that chikungunya has never been established in mainland China before,' he said in a statement. 'This suggests that most of the population had no preexisting immunity, making it easier for the virus to spread quickly.' In response to the outbreak in Foshan, near Hong Kong, Chinese authorities have begun taking measures like distributing mosquito nets, having workers spray residential areas, streets, and construction sites with insecticide. People who do not empty bottles, flower pots, or other outdoor receptacles, where water might accumulate and allow mosquitoes to breed, can be subject to fines of up to 10,000 yuan ($1,400) and have their electricity cut off. Unusually heavy rains and high temperatures this year have worsened the crisis in China. Are we seeing more chikungunya outbreaks? Yes. The number of outbreaks has increased since 2000, just as there have been more outbreaks of other mosquito-transmitted diseases like dengue and Zika, according to Robert Jones, an assistant professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Jones said in a statement that in 2013, chikungunya was first seen in the island of St. Martin and that over the next three years, cases were confirmed in almost 50 countries in the Caribbean and the Americas, with more than one million suspected cases. Advertisement Jones said the risks of chikungunya epidemics have risen due to climate change and urban expansion, warning that the current outbreak could spread to other parts of southern China with humid climates and dense cities.
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
There's One Simple Method to Reduce Alcohol Intake, Scientists Say, And It Works
Researchers have discovered an effective method of getting people to drink less alcohol: Highlight the increased risk of cancer that comes with imbibing and pair that with counting each and every drink. This particular combo of 'why to reduce' and 'how to reduce' messaging can be useful for promoting good health in a population, the researchers found in a 2021 study. Too much drinking doesn't just lead to cancer, of course. Overdoing it on the booze is associated with a whole range of problems, including premature death, heart disease, digestive issues, and an increased risk of dementia. "We found that pairing information about alcohol and cancer with a particular practical action – counting their drinks – resulted in drinkers reducing the amount of alcohol they consumed," said economist and psychologist Simone Pettigrew from The George Institute for Global Health when the findings were announced. Related: For the study, three surveys were filled out: 7,995 people completed the first, 4,588 of those people completed the second three weeks later, and 2,687 people finished the final survey three weeks after that. The participants were split up into different groups and shown different advertisements and messages about drinking. One combination stood out, compared to a control group: A TV ad linking booze and cancer, together with a suggestion to keep count of your drinks, was one of the most effective at getting people to try and cut down on alcohol intake. It was also the only combination where people actually did significantly reduce their alcohol consumption over the six weeks. Other approaches – like encouraging people to decide on a number of drinks and then stick to it – did prompt some of the volunteers to try and cut down, but there was a clear winner based on the people taking part in this research. "Many people don't know that alcohol is a carcinogen," said Pettigrew. "It's important information that drinkers should have access to. But telling people alcohol causes cancer is just part of the solution – we also need to give them ways to take action to reduce their risk." Alcohol consumption can be attributed to as many as 7 percent of premature deaths worldwide, according to the World Health Organization, and making drinkers more aware of the health risks is one way of tackling that problem. While health agencies have also looked at ways of making booze less readily available and more expensive, ultimately, personal choices will determine whether or not behavior around alcohol will shift in the long term. In this particular study, the participants were chosen to be "broadly demographically representative of the Australian drinking public", so it's not an approach that will necessarily work elsewhere – but it seems that counting your drinks could be one option to try if you want to cut down. "There are limited resources available for alcohol harm-reduction campaigns, so it's important to find out which messages resonate best to ensure they have the best chance of working," said Pettigrew. The research was published in Addictive Behaviors. An earlier version of this article was first published in June 2021. Related News Untested Peptide Injections Are Being Sold as 'Next-Gen Biohacks' People With a Home by The Ocean Live Longer And We Don't Know Why The Mere Sight of a Sick Person Can Trigger Our Immune System Solve the daily Crossword