Know Your
True Numbers
Calculate your weekly alcohol units, calorie intake, and understand the health risks based on global medical guidelines.
Health Audit & Unit Calculator
Input your habits to see how you measure up against low-risk guidelines.
Let's establish your baseline.
Please fill in all fields.
How often do you have a drink containing alcohol?
How many drinks do you have on a typical day when you are drinking?
How often do you have 6+ drinks on one occasion?
Calculating risk...
Health & Consumption Metrics
Visualizing how your consumption compares to medical guidelines and affects your body.
Weekly Units vs Guidelines
Your intake (Red) compared to Low Risk Limit (Green)
The "Empty Calorie" Load
Alcohol vs Nutrition
Sleep Quality
Liver Stress
Risk Factor
Medical Reality
2.3 Units
The average amount of alcohol in a single standard glass (175ml) of 13% wine.
7 kcal/g
Alcohol is calorie-dense, nearly as high as fat (9 kcal/g) and higher than sugar (4 kcal/g).
-20%
Reduction in REM sleep cycles after consuming just two alcoholic drinks before bed.
Group 1
Alcohol is classified as a Group 1 carcinogen by the WHO, alongside tobacco and asbestos.
Global Health Impact
Comparing consumption per capita and associated health outcomes.
| Rank | Country | Litres Per Capita | Liver Disease Rate | Risk Level | Trend |
|---|
Health Report Index
In the world of preventive medicine and wellness, we track steps, monitor heart rate, and count macros. Yet, one of the most significant variables in our long-term health equation often goes un-audited: alcohol consumption. This report provides a biological balance sheet analysis of drinking.
For the modern individual, drinking is often viewed as a way to "unwind," but physiologically, it functions as a stressor. When we calculate the cost of drinking, we often only look at the hangover. However, the true cost is systemic inflammation, disrupted sleep architecture, and increased risk of chronic disease. The "Sobriety Dividend" is the physical vitality reclaimed when this toxin is removed from the system.
The Unit Audit: Benchmarking Your Habits
To truly "check your drinking," one must move beyond subjective feelings ("I feel fine") and look at objective metrics. Medical standards provide a baseline for risk assessment.
Defining the "Standard" Drink
Global health bodies measure consumption in "Units" or "Standard Drinks." One unit is roughly 10ml of pure alcohol.
- Pint of Lager (5%): ~2.8 Units
- Glass of Wine (175ml, 13%): ~2.3 Units
- Shot of Spirit (25ml, 40%): ~1 Unit
Using the self-assessment tool above allows you to quantify your intake. But what do the numbers mean?
Risk Thresholds
The CDC and other health organizations generally categorize drinking patterns as follows:
Moderate
Up to 1 drink/day (Women)
Up to 2 drinks/day (Men)
Heavy
8+ drinks/week (Women)
15+ drinks/week (Men)
*Note: "Binge Drinking" is defined as consuming 4-5+ drinks in a single 2-hour occasion.
The "Grey Area" Drinker
Many people fall into the "Grey Area." You aren't physically dependent, and you don't hit "rock bottom," but you drink more than the moderate guidelines. You function, but you operate with a constant, low-level physiological drag. Checking your drinking means identifying if you are in this zone where the costs (sleep quality, anxiety, weight gain) quietly outweigh the benefits.
The Compound Interest of Health
Just as financial debt compounds over time, so does biological debt. Alcohol acts as a "compound debt" on your physiology.
Consider the mechanism: Alcohol borrows energy from tomorrow to pay for today. But the interest rate is high. Even moderate drinking (1-2 drinks) increases resting heart rate and decreases Heart Rate Variability (HRV) for up to 48 hours. This results in a measurable reduction in physical readiness the following day.
Conversely, reducing intake offers Compound Recovery. Waking up fully rested, with optimized REM cycles, allows for consistent tissue repair, hormonal balance, and immune system function. Over a decade, the individual who prioritizes recovery will have a significantly lower biological age than the one who regularly compromises it.
The Physiological Tax
Every drink introduces specific physiological taxes on the body:
1. The Metabolic Pause
When alcohol is present, the body prioritizes its elimination over all other metabolic processes. Fat burning stops completely until the alcohol is cleared. For those seeking weight loss or body composition changes, regular drinking acts as a metabolic "pause button," halting progress regardless of diet or exercise.
2. The Cortisol Spike
The "Hangxiety" phenomenon is biologically rooted in cortisol. As alcohol leaves the bloodstream, the brain attempts to rebalance its chemistry by dumping cortisol and adrenaline into the system. This creates a low-level "fight or flight" background noise that persists for hours, affecting mood stability and stress resilience.
Physical Performance Impact
For the active individual, alcohol is an anti-performance drug. It impairs muscle protein synthesis, meaning the hard work done in the gym is not fully translated into muscle repair and growth. It also dehydrates tissues, increasing the risk of soft tissue injury.
We are seeing the rise of the "Sober Athlete"—professionals and amateurs alike who recognize that their physical endurance is their primary asset. Removing the variable of intoxication is the quickest, most effective way to upgrade physical performance metrics without changing training volume.
Conclusion
The numbers don't lie. Whether you view it through the lens of calories, sleep quality, or disease risk, alcohol is a taxing habit. It is a subscription service to reduced vitality that you pay for with your health.
By auditing this habit, you aren't "giving up" fun; you are reallocating biological resources. You are taking energy that was previously used to process toxins and investing it into longevity, clarity, and vitality. The ROI of checking your drinking is infinite because it returns to you the one asset you can never buy more of: your health.