Wine drinkers tend
to buy healthier food than beer drinkers, according to a Danish study
published Tuesday on the website of a weekly medical review.
People who bought wine at the store were also more likely to buy more
olives, fruits and vegetables, fish, lean
meats and dairy products than beer consumers did, said the
study.
Beer buyers were more likely to buy frozen dinners, cold cuts, pork,
mutton, crisps, sugary products, butter, margarine and soft drinks.
The study was conducted by four researchers from the National Institute
of Public Health over the course of six months.
Alcohol researchers Erik Skovenborg and Morten Groenbaek and two other
doctors collected 3.5 million grocery receipts from 98 stores during the
period September 30, 2002, to February 2003.
The customers at the grocery stores represented a large sample of the
Danish population, they said.
"Our results confirm international studies which show that wine
drinkers are more inclined to eat fruits, vegetables and fish and rarely
use saturated fats, compared to those who like other kinds of alcoholic
beverages," they concluded.
Wine consumers also tended to have higher education levels, higher
earnings and be in better psychological health, they added, citing a
previous Danish study.
Their interest in consumers' grocery bags followed a series of studies
in the Danish media suggesting that wine drinkers ran a lower risk of
cardiovascular disease and some types of cancer than beer drinkers.