Film, Media & TV2 mins ago
Alcoholic
25 Answers
Am I an alcoholic if a drink a half a bottle of vodka every evening between 5pm to 7 pm?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Gingerbaker. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I would say drink dependent rather than alcoholic.
If you can have 2 or 3 days a week without drinking or craving a drink you're not alcoholic & an alcoholic wouldn't stop at half a bottle, when drinking they would finish the whole bottle (presuming you don't buy it in halves?).
BUT at 1/2 bottle every day you will be risking serious health problems & giving your wallet a beating.
If you can have 2 or 3 days a week without drinking or craving a drink you're not alcoholic & an alcoholic wouldn't stop at half a bottle, when drinking they would finish the whole bottle (presuming you don't buy it in halves?).
BUT at 1/2 bottle every day you will be risking serious health problems & giving your wallet a beating.
You're consuming about 13 units of alcohol each evening (based upon the strength of Smirnoff, as an example, at 37% ABV). The weekly safe limit, as defined by the NHS, is 14 units. So you're drinking about a week's worth of booze in the space of two hours.
If you feel a compulsion (or, at least, a strong desire) to drink that vodka, you're classed as an 'alcoholic' (or, in more modern parlance, 'alcohol dependent') by many/most medical practitioners.
Alcoholics Anonymous is the obvious support group to turn to
https:/ /www.al coholic s-anony mous.or g.uk/
Others are listed here:
https:/ /www.nh s.uk/li ve-well /alcoho l-suppo rt/
If you feel a compulsion (or, at least, a strong desire) to drink that vodka, you're classed as an 'alcoholic' (or, in more modern parlance, 'alcohol dependent') by many/most medical practitioners.
Alcoholics Anonymous is the obvious support group to turn to
https:/
Others are listed here:
https:/
There's no scientific evidence about what is a safe amount of alcohol. It's a complex issue; there are benefits (feelgood, social wellbeing....) and there are also questions of diet, lifestyle etc. I drink 'too much' but I have a level at which I know I have had enough for the day. I don't drink until the evening and only with food. I don't like spirits.
jno, my earlier post was meant to recommend following dave's advice. I can go without whenever social situations make it appropriate. I don't go without otherwise. I drink more than is recommended. I have never missed a day at work because of alcohol the night before. I'm old enough to be a bit blase about certain things like wanting to be at the peak of fitness. Not that that is your business! :-)
I've followed your advice without knowing it, Atheist, I ignore the NHS advice just as I ignore the five-a-day business. But the suggestion of seeing if you can cope without alcohol is important: if you can't you may well be alcoholic; if you can, you're probably not - regardless of the actual amount you drink.
From a Wikipedia article on alcohol units:-
'An international study of about 6,000 men and 11,000 women for a total of 75,000 person-years found that people who reported that they drank more than a threshold value of 2 units of alcohol a day had a higher risk of fractures than non-drinkers. For example, those who drank over 3 units a day had nearly twice the risk of a hip fracture.'
Given the claimed dangers of excessive alcohol consumption, I’m surprised that such a study did not find other effects such as liver damage/loss of function, shorter life expectancy etc.
It seems that the greatest danger from excessive alcohol consumption is physical body damage due to a fall/accident.
'An international study of about 6,000 men and 11,000 women for a total of 75,000 person-years found that people who reported that they drank more than a threshold value of 2 units of alcohol a day had a higher risk of fractures than non-drinkers. For example, those who drank over 3 units a day had nearly twice the risk of a hip fracture.'
Given the claimed dangers of excessive alcohol consumption, I’m surprised that such a study did not find other effects such as liver damage/loss of function, shorter life expectancy etc.
It seems that the greatest danger from excessive alcohol consumption is physical body damage due to a fall/accident.