Moderate drinking before the unit: medicine and life assurance in Britain and the US c.1860–1930

This article describes the way in which “Anstie’s Limit” – a particular definition of moderate drinking first defined in Britain in the 1860s by the physician Francis Edmund Anstie (1833–1874) – became established as a useful measure of moderate alcohol consumption. Becoming fairly well-established...

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Main Authors: Kneale, James, French, Shaun
Format: Article
Published: Informa Healthcare 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29151/
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author Kneale, James
French, Shaun
author_facet Kneale, James
French, Shaun
author_sort Kneale, James
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This article describes the way in which “Anstie’s Limit” – a particular definition of moderate drinking first defined in Britain in the 1860s by the physician Francis Edmund Anstie (1833–1874) – became established as a useful measure of moderate alcohol consumption. Becoming fairly well-established in mainstream Anglophone medicine by 1900, it was also communicated to the public in Britain, North America and New Zealand through newspaper reports. However, the limit also travelled to less familiar places, including life assurance offices, where a number of different strategies for separating moderate from excessive drinkers emerged from the dialogue between medicine and life assurance. Whilst these ideas of moderation seem to have disappeared into the background for much of the twentieth century, re-emerging as the “J-shaped” curve, these early developments anticipate many of the questions surrounding uses of the “unit” to quantify moderate alcohol consumption in Britain today. The article will therefore conclude by exploring some of the lessons of this story for contemporary discussions of moderation, suggesting that we should pay more attention to whether these metrics work, where they work and why.
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spelling nottingham-291512020-05-04T20:11:14Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29151/ Moderate drinking before the unit: medicine and life assurance in Britain and the US c.1860–1930 Kneale, James French, Shaun This article describes the way in which “Anstie’s Limit” – a particular definition of moderate drinking first defined in Britain in the 1860s by the physician Francis Edmund Anstie (1833–1874) – became established as a useful measure of moderate alcohol consumption. Becoming fairly well-established in mainstream Anglophone medicine by 1900, it was also communicated to the public in Britain, North America and New Zealand through newspaper reports. However, the limit also travelled to less familiar places, including life assurance offices, where a number of different strategies for separating moderate from excessive drinkers emerged from the dialogue between medicine and life assurance. Whilst these ideas of moderation seem to have disappeared into the background for much of the twentieth century, re-emerging as the “J-shaped” curve, these early developments anticipate many of the questions surrounding uses of the “unit” to quantify moderate alcohol consumption in Britain today. The article will therefore conclude by exploring some of the lessons of this story for contemporary discussions of moderation, suggesting that we should pay more attention to whether these metrics work, where they work and why. Informa Healthcare 2015 Article PeerReviewed Kneale, James and French, Shaun (2015) Moderate drinking before the unit: medicine and life assurance in Britain and the US c.1860–1930. Drugs: Education, Prevention, and Policy, 22 (2). pp. 111-117. ISSN 0968-7637 Alcohol risk harm reduction http://informahealthcare.com/doi/abs/10.3109/09687637.2014.964185 doi:10.3109/09687637.2014.964185 doi:10.3109/09687637.2014.964185
spellingShingle Alcohol
risk
harm reduction
Kneale, James
French, Shaun
Moderate drinking before the unit: medicine and life assurance in Britain and the US c.1860–1930
title Moderate drinking before the unit: medicine and life assurance in Britain and the US c.1860–1930
title_full Moderate drinking before the unit: medicine and life assurance in Britain and the US c.1860–1930
title_fullStr Moderate drinking before the unit: medicine and life assurance in Britain and the US c.1860–1930
title_full_unstemmed Moderate drinking before the unit: medicine and life assurance in Britain and the US c.1860–1930
title_short Moderate drinking before the unit: medicine and life assurance in Britain and the US c.1860–1930
title_sort moderate drinking before the unit: medicine and life assurance in britain and the us c.1860–1930
topic Alcohol
risk
harm reduction
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29151/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29151/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29151/