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» Home » News » New website helps you calculate the benefits of drinking less

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Communications
UBC Faculty of Medicine
Email: communications.med@ubc.ca
Office: 604.822.2421

New website helps you calculate the benefits of drinking less

By Alex Tsui | January 27, 2025

A man looking out a window sits behind a laptop in the centre of the photograph and the laptop is displaying a website.
Dr. Tim Naimi is the lead researcher for KnowAlcohol.ca, a new tool that generates personalized estimates of the potential health risks from alcohol. (Credit: UVic Photo Services)

For many people, “Dry January” is a time to take a break or cut back on alcohol. But what are the health benefits of drinking less? What if you knew how many minutes of life you could potentially regain by skipping that last drink, or how your weekly alcohol intake measures up compared to smoking cigarettes?

That’s the aim of a new website, KnowAlcohol.ca, launched by researchers with the UBC Faculty of Medicine’s Island Medical Program and the University of Victoria’s Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research (CISUR). The website features a tool and calculator designed to generate personalized estimates of the potential health risks related to an individual’s alcohol use—and the benefits of cutting back.

Using the science behind Canada’s Guidance on Alcohol and Health, the Know Alcohol calculator shares individualized risks of alcohol-related disease, including several types of cancers, measures like cigarette equivalency, and minutes of life lost per drink, as well as information about costs and calories related to alcohol—all tailored to individuals based on their age, sex and the amount they drink per week.

Dr. Tim Naimi (Credit: Darren Stone)

“When Canada’s Guidance on Alcohol and Health was released two years ago, it started the first national conversation on alcohol consumption,” says Dr. Tim Naimi, CISUR director and an affiliate professor of general internal medicine at UBC who teaches with UBC’s Island Medical Program, who was also part of the expert advisory panel that created the guidance. “We wanted to take it a step further and make a tool that showed people personalized results so they could make evidence-informed decisions about their drinking habits.”

In addition to the calculator, KnowAlcohol.ca also has a wealth of information about alcohol’s impacts, a quiz to test people’s knowledge, a standard drink calculator, and more. The research team conducted cross-country surveys and created an advisory group to help shape the site’s content.

“The website isn’t just based on complicated mathematical models and risk estimates. We talked to people all over the country when designing Know Alcohol and got input every step of the way,” says Dr. Naimi. “One thing we heard clearly was we needed to not just show people their potential harms, but also what you could gain by cutting down, even if it was just by one drink per week.”

Dr. Naimi says Know Alcohol’s goal is to amplify the main message of Canada’s Guidance on Alcohol and Health—that drinking less is better—and be a place where people can go to get reliable facts about alcohol’s health impacts. Getting these facts, he says, is difficult given how little information is provided to consumers about alcohol.

“A can of peas has more information on it than a can of beer,” says Dr. Naimi. “We wanted to provide credible information about alcohol with this site and calculator. People have the right to know.”

Dr. Alexander Caudarella, CEO of the Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction, also sees value in the new tool.

“Know Alcohol is an invaluable tool to help people in Canada, and around the world, better understand the relationship between alcohol and their health,” says Dr. Caudarella. “The main message of Canada’s Guidance on Alcohol and Health – that people consider drinking less – is often overlooked and Know Alcohol easily explains the benefits of drinking less. Using this resource will allow people to gain insight on their own alcohol use and help continue the important conversations about alcohol consumption started back in 2023 with the release of the Guidance itself.”


A version of this story was originally published by the University of Victoria. The project was funded by Health Canada’s Substance Use and Addictions Program. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent the views of Health Canada.

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Communications
UBC Faculty of Medicine
Email: communications.med@ubc.ca
Office: 604.822.2421
Faculty of Medicine
317 - 2194 Health Sciences Mall
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z3
Tel 604 822 2421
Website www.med.ubc.ca
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