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Last updated on February 11, 2012 at 15:54 EST

Daily Drink Seen Good for Men, Not Women

May 26, 2006

Researchers in Denmark say drinking alcohol every day lowers risk of heart disease, but not as much for women as for men.

The study appears in the British Medical Journal, where an accompanying editorial warned the results should not be used to justify potentially harmful drinking behavior.

The researchers studied more than 50,000 men and women ages 50-65, who were monitored for an average of 5.7 years, with the results adjusted for known risk factors.

The study said women who drank alcohol at least one day a week had a lower risk of coronary heart disease than women who drank alcohol less than one day a week. But the risks were similar for drinking one day a week or seven days a week.

The researchers said this suggested that the amount of alcohol consumed is more important than drinking frequency among women.

For men, risks were lowest for the most frequent drinkers, suggesting it doesn’t matter how much men drink, as long as they drink every day.

The authors also said the benefits of alcohol on coronary heart disease are by far exceeded by the harmful effects of heavy alcohol drinking.