Consistent heavy drinking may raise cancer risk more than previously understood.
A new study tracks how heavy alcohol use across adulthood affects colorectal cancer risk and how quitting drinking may lower or mitigate certain risks.
A new study suggests that current drinkers with the highest average lifetime alcohol intake were at a 91% higher risk for ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Heavy drinking is associated with increased risk of a type of brain injury linked with memory and thinking problems. That’s ...
Heavy drinking linked to higher colorectal cancer risk in a major study of 88,000 U.S. adults. Consistent alcohol use shows ...
Heavy drinking increases pregnancy risk by 51% among those most wanting to avoid conception. Cannabis use shows similar elevated desire to avoid pregnancy but does not significantly impact pregnancy ...
Lifestyle factors, including alcohol intake, have been linked with intracerebral hemorrhage. Compared with people who drank less than three daily drinks, heavy drinkers were younger at intracerebral ...
Nicotine vaping has increased slightly over the past few years in the U.S., while binge drinking and heavy alcohol use were both slightly down, according to a report from the Substance Abuse and ...
(CNN) — Heavy drinking is associated with increased risk of a type of brain injury linked with memory and thinking problems. That’s according to a new study in which researchers defined heavy drinking ...