A black pint a day REALLY keeps the doctor away Instead of the potentially deadly aspirin-a-day therapy for heart disease that many in the medical mainstream advocate, perhaps their advice SHOULD be
Down a pint of Guinness every day! Yes, the toast-worthy findings just keep rolling in for the rapidly growing alcohol-as-health-food movement - of which I'm a proud charter member, by the way. And in just the latest bit of heartening news, a recent study conducted by the University of Wisconsin (presented at the annual meeting of the American Heart Association, no less) shows that moderate daily consumption of dark beers like the ubiquitous Guinness can significantly reduce markers for platelet aggregation
That's a fancy way of saying it helps prevent the dangerous blood clotting that often causes heart attacks in those with heart disease. Whether it is the alcohol in the brew itself or other factors like the action of antioxidant flavonoids (especially plentiful in darker beers, as in the red wines) that contributes to the reduction in heart risk has not been firmly established. However, there is abundant research out there suggesting that both are beneficial. What's really funny (more like tragic, actually) about this is the fact that in two separate, unrelated online sources - one of which is the venerable BBC itself - the same opening point was used to lead into the story: That a pint a day of dark beer may work AS WELL AS ASPIRIN at reducing the risk of heart attacks due to blood clotting. This just goes to show how pervasive the influence of the dead-wrong medical mainstream really is, because
Aspirin therapy has been shown to INCREASE the risk of clot-related heart attack, especially among those with LOWER cholesterol! (Read my Daily Dose from 4/29/03 for more on this) Listen, if it's a choice between the two, pour yourself a healthy, satisfying pint of Guinness or other rich, flavorful dark beer every day - and live to be a pallbearer at the aspirin-poppers funerals, please! Oh, and don't worry about that other health "myth" regarding regular beer consumption. Keep reading
*********************************************** Czech out this good news about brews We can't call them "beer bellies" any more. That's right: Despite the mainstream myth that regular beer drinking can give you an outsize gut, some large-scale European research shows that even heavy beer drinkers were no more likely to have large bellies or be overweight than non-drinkers. Conducted in the Czech Republic, where beer is the most popular drink among both sexes, the nearly 2000 subjects involved in the study appeared to be at identical risk for weight gain whether they drank beer moderately (1 liter per week), copiously (7 liters or more per week), or not at all. In case you were wondering about the study's location, the Czech Republic was chosen because it is the ideal place for such research - since beer drinking in that nation (both mealtime and recreational) crosses all demographic groups and is not the least bit socially stigmatized, according to the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition. And having been there myself, I can tell you there's no such thing as "lite beer" in those parts
Thanks to this research, those deluded weenies in the mainstream that are alcohol-hostile (a number that's shrinking by the day, thankfully) now have one less lie to throw at you for why you shouldn't drink! So what should we start calling those ungainly guts, now that there's proof that beer is not the culprit? How about "bread bellies," since that's really what they are
Giving the beer bullies a belly ache, William Campbell Douglass II, MD
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