I drink more than the recommend units per week and have done for a long time i wonder if many of us have ever sat down and worked out just how much we do drink, so the question is how many units on average do you drink each week?
Presenter Adrian Chiles has urged people to track their alcohol intake after revealing he sometimes drank 80 or 100 units a week.
The BBC 5 live host said it was "horrifying" to add up his alcohol consumption, which was well over the recommended weekly 14 units.
He was told by a doctor he "can't carry on like this" and his liver damage could cause cirrhosis or death.
Chiles, 51, has tackled the issue of drinking in a new BBC documentary.
Speaking on BBC Breakfast, Chiles said: "I was just staggered what I was putting away".
He said most of his drinking was "completely mundane and harmless", adding: "I don't really get drunk, I don't misbehave, I don't drink during the day, I don't drink alone, I don't particularly stay up late.
"I just drink something every day.
"There are loads of us who just drink too much and I just wondered why I was so dependent on it in a small way, or is it a big way."
Chiles' comments have prompted many people to speak about their own drinking habits. Actress Linda Robson told ITV's Loose Women she thought "maybe I could have been on the way to being an alcoholic" when she used to drink a bottle of wine a night.
She said: "My big thing was because I didn't drink in the daytime then I didn't have a problem and I could make myself wait until that time every night so I obviously didn't have a problem.
"But I was still functioning, I was still coming into work."
Read in full - https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-45258081
Presenter Adrian Chiles has urged people to track their alcohol intake after revealing he sometimes drank 80 or 100 units a week.
The BBC 5 live host said it was "horrifying" to add up his alcohol consumption, which was well over the recommended weekly 14 units.
He was told by a doctor he "can't carry on like this" and his liver damage could cause cirrhosis or death.
Chiles, 51, has tackled the issue of drinking in a new BBC documentary.
Speaking on BBC Breakfast, Chiles said: "I was just staggered what I was putting away".
He said most of his drinking was "completely mundane and harmless", adding: "I don't really get drunk, I don't misbehave, I don't drink during the day, I don't drink alone, I don't particularly stay up late.
"I just drink something every day.
"There are loads of us who just drink too much and I just wondered why I was so dependent on it in a small way, or is it a big way."
Chiles' comments have prompted many people to speak about their own drinking habits. Actress Linda Robson told ITV's Loose Women she thought "maybe I could have been on the way to being an alcoholic" when she used to drink a bottle of wine a night.
She said: "My big thing was because I didn't drink in the daytime then I didn't have a problem and I could make myself wait until that time every night so I obviously didn't have a problem.
"But I was still functioning, I was still coming into work."
Read in full - https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-45258081
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