FranceLink

French urged to cut down on their drinking

National campaign to encourage the French to cut down on their drinking came after study showing a quarter of them over-consume wine.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

To support Mediapart subscribe

France on Monday launched a national campaign to encourage the wine-loving French to cut down on their drinking after a study showed that a quarter of them over-consume. But many still feel that “a nice meal can’t be enjoyed without a good wine”, reports FRANCE 24.

France has one of the highest alcohol consumption rates in Europe, with the country trailing behind only Estonia, Lithuania and the Czech Republic in the quantities of alcohol it drinks, according to the World Health Organization.

This drinking culture – largely attributed to wine, which represents 58 percent of France’s total alcohol consumption – on Monday prompted the public health agency and the National Institute of Cancer (INCa) to launch a national campaign, with recommendations for the maximum daily intake of alcohol.

“For your health, alcohol should be limited to a maximum of two glasses per day, and not every day either,” they wrote, a limit that 24 percent of French adults regularly surpass. Alcohol is the second-biggest cause for preventable deaths in France after tobacco, killing some 41,000 people each year.

Read more of this report from FRANCE 24.