Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Most Canadians Drink Alcohol But May Not Know Health Risks: Country's Top Doctor

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Feb, 2016 01:14 PM
    TORONTO — The country's chief public health officer has tabled a report to Parliament on alcohol consumption by Canadians, which warns of the potential health risks from even low levels of drinking.
     
    Dr. Gregory Taylor says drinking booze has become a normalized activity, with almost 80 per cent of Canadians tippling wine, beer or spirits — some of them to excess.
     
    Taylor says alcohol consumption is related to more than 4,000 deaths each year, and 230 of them are directly caused by alcohol poisoning.
     
    And each year, about 3,000 babies are born in Canada with fetal alcohol syndrome caused by women drinking during pregnancy; about 330,000 Canadians live with cognitive impairments from the disorder.
     
     
    The report points out that alcohol is also a known carcinogenic that's been implicated in the development of breast, colorectal, oral and liver cancers.
     
    Taylor says the purpose of the report is to educate Canadians about alcohol-related health risks.
     
    "We think of alcohol in Canada more as a food or a beverage, but in fact it's a mind-altering psychotrophic drug," Taylor said from Ottawa. "If there's one key message that I'd like to get across, it's that it's not harmless."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Judge Finds Firearms Investigator Defamed N.S. Woman, Awards Her $50,000 Damages

    Judge Finds Firearms Investigator Defamed N.S. Woman, Awards Her $50,000 Damages
    Court documents show that when Laura Doucette applied for a firearms licence in 2011 as part of a course, firearms investigator David Grimes warned her instructors she may have been involved in an armed robbery.

    Judge Finds Firearms Investigator Defamed N.S. Woman, Awards Her $50,000 Damages

    Prosecutors Drop Sex Assault Charge Against Pan Am Soccer Player

    Prosecutors Drop Sex Assault Charge Against Pan Am Soccer Player
    The charge against Lucas Domingues Piazon, 21, was dismissed Tuesday morning because there was no reasonable prospect of conviction, defence lawyer Brian Greenspan said. 

    Prosecutors Drop Sex Assault Charge Against Pan Am Soccer Player

    Jury Selected In Murder Trial In Death Of Hamilton Man Tim Bosma

    Jury Selected In Murder Trial In Death Of Hamilton Man Tim Bosma
    Tim Bosma left his home on May 6, 2013 and was never seen alive again. His body was found "burned beyond recognition" more than a week later.

    Jury Selected In Murder Trial In Death Of Hamilton Man Tim Bosma

    Ontario's Finance Minister Knew 2014 Election Would Challenge Auto Insurance Promise

    The Liberal government failed to cut auto insurance rates by 15 per cent by its self-imposed deadline of August 2015 — a promise that was part of a deal to get NDP support for the 2013 budget when they were still a minority government.

    Ontario's Finance Minister Knew 2014 Election Would Challenge Auto Insurance Promise

    A Look At How The Canadian Courts Handle Young People Charged With Murder

    A Look At How The Canadian Courts Handle Young People Charged With Murder
    A 17-year-old boy has been charged with four counts of first-degree murder and seven counts of attempted murder after a shooting in northern Saskatchewan. Because of his age, he falls under the Youth Criminal Justice Act. 

    A Look At How The Canadian Courts Handle Young People Charged With Murder

    7 Hospitalized As American Airlines Jet Diverted To St John's After Hitting Heavy Turbulence

    7 Hospitalized As American Airlines Jet Diverted To St John's After Hitting Heavy Turbulence
    American flight 206 left Miami at 3:03 p.m. local time bound for Milan, but was diverted and landed at St. John's International Airport at 9:45 p.m. NT.

    7 Hospitalized As American Airlines Jet Diverted To St John's After Hitting Heavy Turbulence