A scorching new critique of Canada's 'pseudo-scientific' alcohol guidelines
Clearly there is no love lost between these camps. In an email to the National Post, Dr. Tim Naimi, director of the Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research at the University of Victoria and an author of the CCSA analysis underpinning the new guidance, took issue with many of IFSAR’s critiques, arguing that “much of scientific worldview is pretty outdated.” In an interview, Dr.
But as the ISFAR analysis and others have noted, the CCSA’s own technical analysis outlines potential healthlikely to suffer ischemic heart disease, ischemic stroke or intracerebral hemorrhage while quaffing up to seven drinks a week. Even at 14 drinks a week, the analysis reckons that women’s risk of diabetes drops by 34 per cent.
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