Drinking alcohol key to living past 90

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Drinking alcohol key to living past 90

http://www.nydailynews.com/life-style/health/drinking-alcohol-key-living-90-article-1.3829634

Monday, February 19, 2018, 12:07 PM

Cheers to life — seriously.

When it comes to making it into your 90s, booze actually beats exercise, according to a long-term study.

The research, led by University of California neurologist Claudia Kawas, tracked 1,700 nonagenarians enrolled in the 90+ Study that began in 2003 to explore impacts of daily habits on longevity.

Researchers discovered that subjects who drank about two glasses of beer or wine a day were 18% less likely to experience a premature death, the Independent reports.

Meanwhile, participants who exercised 15 to 45 minutes a day, cut the same risk by 11%.

“I have no explanation for it, but I do firmly believe that modest drinking improves longevity,” Kawas stated over the weekend at the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual conference in Austin, Texas.

Other factors were found to boost longevity, including weight. Participants who were slightly overweight — but not obese — cut their odds of an early death by 3%.

“It’s not bad to be skinny when you’re young but it’s very bad to be skinny when you’re old,” Kawas noted in her address.

Subjects who kept busy with a daily hobby two hours a day were 21% less likely to die early, while those who drank two cups of coffee a day cut that risk by 10%.

Further study is needed to determine how habits impact longevity beyond people’s genetic makeups.
 

Meh...

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Drinking alcohol key to living past 90

http://www.nydailynews.com/life-style/health/drinking-alcohol-key-living-90-article-1.3829634

Monday, February 19, 2018, 12:07 PM

Cheers to life — seriously.

When it comes to making it into your 90s, booze actually beats exercise, according to a long-term study.

The research, led by University of California neurologist Claudia Kawas, tracked 1,700 nonagenarians enrolled in the 90+ Study that began in 2003 to explore impacts of daily habits on longevity.

Researchers discovered that subjects who drank about two glasses of beer or wine a day were 18% less likely to experience a premature death, the Independent reports.

Meanwhile, participants who exercised 15 to 45 minutes a day, cut the same risk by 11%.

“I have no explanation for it, but I do firmly believe that modest drinking improves longevity,” Kawas stated over the weekend at the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual conference in Austin, Texas.

Other factors were found to boost longevity, including weight. Participants who were slightly overweight — but not obese — cut their odds of an early death by 3%.

“It’s not bad to be skinny when you’re young but it’s very bad to be skinny when you’re old,” Kawas noted in her address.

Subjects who kept busy with a daily hobby two hours a day were 21% less likely to die early, while those who drank two cups of coffee a day cut that risk by 10%.

Further study is needed to determine how habits impact longevity beyond people’s genetic makeups.

So at slightly overweight , two draft beers with any lunch or dinner out and at least two cups of coffee every morning and piddling around with my hobbies at least more than two hours a day , five days per week , I am in great shape . Good news , LOL
 
Correlation still implying causation, apparently. Even though people still spend 12+ years in school.

Guess the fact that that French woman who lived the longest, who smoked her whole life, indicates we should all start smoking to boost our longevity.
 
Correlation still implying causation, apparently. Even though people still spend 12+ years in school.

Guess the fact that that French woman who lived the longest, who smoked her whole life, indicates we should all start smoking to boost our longevity.

Smoking cannabis?
 
Correlation still implying causation, apparently.

Oh lord save me, I am so sick of that sophmoric nonsense.

Of course, correlation does necessarily mean causation, but if you have a common factor, a common denominator that shows up, then it implies it is a causal factor.
 
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Correlation still implying causation, apparently. Even though people still spend 12+ years in school.

Guess the fact that that French woman who lived the longest, who smoked her whole life, indicates we should all start smoking to boost our longevity.

Makes everyone want a cigarette just thinking about it .
 
^Against alcohol. What about Pork or Bacon? Hmmm.

donnay posts government propaganda against alcohol.

acptulsa points out it doesn't carry much weight against alcohol, being government propaganda.

kahless decides the fact that acptulsa is defending alcohol against government propaganda means he's anti-alcohol, and implies that might have something to do with Islam.

Give that man a Participation Trophy!
 
donnay posts government propaganda against alcohol.

acptulsa points out it doesn't carry much weight against alcohol, being government propaganda.

kahless decides the fact that acptulsa is defending alcohol against government propaganda means he's anti-alcohol, and implies that might have something to do with Islam.

Give that man a Participation Trophy!

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Oh lord save me, I am so sick of that sophmoric nonsense.

Of course, correlation does necessarily mean causation, but if you have a common factor, a common denominator that shows up, then it implies it is a causal factor.

Not really. Lots of old dead people- to the rate of tens of millions- dyed their hair. Did hair dyeing lead to their death? Of course not. Are they correlated? Certainly. As for your actual post the scientist herself says:

I have no explanation for it, but I do firmly believe that modest drinking improves longevity,” Kawas stated

That sounds less like sciences and more like faith to me. And while thos etwo are not opposed ideas, something taking on a "firm belief" is not something proven with fact.
 
Not really. Lots of old dead people- to the rate of tens of millions- dyed their hair. Did hair dyeing lead to their death? Of course not. Are they correlated?

That's not a valid comparison.

A valid comparison would be a study where old people who dyed their hair died younger than people who didn't, and the claim was that dying your hair causes you to die younger.

If that is due to correlation rather than causation, then you still have to figure out what dying hair correlates with that causes premature death in order to prove it is correlation and not causation. Otherwise it is just evidence that dying your hair may lead to premature death.
 
I have known and am related to my fair share of people in their 90's and 100's. All of them drank, smoked, and used coffee. I want to start drinking again if I know I am on my last leg but maybe I should start sooner rather than later. But I am not real fond of beer or wine.
 
I have known and am related to my fair share of people in their 90's and 100's. All of them drank, smoked, and used coffee. I want to start drinking again if I know I am on my last leg but maybe I should start sooner rather than later. But I am not real fond of beer or wine.

Gin and tonic (squeeze of lime)
 
I have known and am related to my fair share of people in their 90's and 100's. All of them drank, smoked, and used coffee. I want to start drinking again if I know I am on my last leg but maybe I should start sooner rather than later. But I am not real fond of beer or wine.

Try Cider,,

An Apple a Day.
 
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