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Quit alcohol to reduce mouth
cancer risk
Reported May 09, 2008
The Mouth Cancer Foundation is calling for a reduction in the current daily
alcohol intake safety guidelines.
It follows the worldwide report which concludes that men and women who drink
just two glasses of alcohol a day increase the risk of developing mouth
cancer by 75%.
The report – Alcohol as a Cause of Cancer* from the Cancer Institute of New
South Wales, Australia, casts doubt on current drinking guidelines.
It also found that women drinking just two standard drinks per day increases
their risk of developing breast cancer by 22%, while four drinks a day
increases a man's risk of developing bowel cancer by 64%.
The Department of Health's current advice is that men should not regularly
drink more than 3-4 units of alcohol per day, and women should not regularly
drink more than 2-3 units of alcohol per day.
Founder of the Mouth Cancer Foundation, Dr Vinod Joshi says:'In view of this
latest report the current alcohol guidelines that we've got are actually
very high.
'To reduce the risk of mouth cancer risk, the Mouth Cancer Foundation
recommends that people should limit or avoid their alcohol altogether.'
For men, the Mouth Cancer Foundation recommends no more than two standard
drinks a day and for women no more than one standard drink a day.
The evidence about alcohol and the link to cancer is growing and people
should be more aware of the risks and reduce their alcohol consumption.
The report came about in a bid to explain the increasing levels of cancer in
society.
The international research suggests that there are no safe levels of alcohol
consumption.
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