Drinks industry distorts alcohol cancer
risk: scientists
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[September 12, 2017]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON, Sept 7 (Reuters) - The alcohol
industry uses denial, distortion and distraction to mislead people about
the risks of developing cancer from drinking, often employing similar
tactics to those of the tobacco industry, a study said on Thursday.
Drinks industry organizations often present the relationship between
alcohol and cancer as highly complex, implying there is no clear
evidence of a consistent link, said the study led by scientists at the
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) and Sweden's
Karolinska Institutet.
Other strategies include denying any relationship exists, or saying
inaccurately that there is no risk with moderate drinking, the study
found. The industry also seeks to mention a wide range of other real and
potential cancer risk factors in an effort to present alcohol as just
one of many, it added.
Responding to the study, the Distilled Spirits Council, a U.S. alcohol
trade association, said it was "a highly selective" review authored by
researchers with "anti-alcohol biases".
"The Council does not recommend that people drink alcohol for potential
health benefits," it said in a statement. "Drinking in moderation may
pose health risks for some people, and some individuals should not drink
at all."
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The International Alliance for Responsible Drinking, which represents
large brewers and distillers including Anheuser-Busch InBev and Diageo ,
said it disagreed with the study's conclusions. "We ... stand by the
information that we publish on drinking and health," it said.
RISING RISK
The World Health Organization says drinking alcohol is a
well-established risk factor for a range of cancers, including tumors of
the mouth, liver, breast and colon and bowel. And the risk of cancer
rises with levels of alcohol consumed.
The research team behind Thursday's study analyzed the information
relating to cancer on the websites and documents of nearly 30 alcohol
industry organizations around the world between September 2016 and
December 2016.
"The weight of scientific evidence is clear - drinking alcohol increases
the risk of some of the most common forms of cancer," said Mark
Petticrew, a professor of public Health at the LSHTM who co-led the
study.
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Customers hold glasses of draught beer at a restaurant in Hanoi,
Vietnam June 24, 2017. REUTERS/Kham/File Photo
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"It has been argued that greater public awareness, particularly of
the risk of breast cancer, poses a significant threat to the alcohol
industry. Our analysis suggests that the major global alcohol
producers may attempt to mitigate this by disseminating misleading
information."
Petticrew's team identified three main industry strategies: Denying
any link with cancer, or selective omission of the relationship;
distortion by mentioning some risk of cancer, but misrepresenting or
obfuscating its size; and distraction by seeking to draw focus away
from the risks of alcohol and towards other cancer risks.
One of the most significant findings was that industry materials
omitted or misrepresented evidence on breast and bowel cancer, both
of which are linked to drinking. When breast cancer was mentioned,
21 of the organizations studied gave no, or misleading, information
about it, the study said.
Ian Gilmore, chair of the Alcohol Health Alliance UK, said the study
"clearly shows the alcohol industry misleading the public".
"With only 1 in 10 people aware of the link between alcohol and
cancer, people have both a need and a right to clear information
about the health risks of drinking alcohol."
Petticrew said the study's findings, published in the journal Drug
and Alcohol Review on Thursday, were important partly because the
alcohol industry is often involved in spreading health information
to people around the world.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Additional reporting by Martinne Geller;
Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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