Do Drinkers Exercise More Than Their Sober Peers?

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Those Who Drink More May Also Be More Likely to Exercise, New Research Suggests

By COURTNEY HUTCHISON
ABC News Medical Unit

While some runners load up on carbohydrates before a race to boost their endurance, members of the Boston Hash League, a self-defined "drinking club with a running problem," swap that pre-race bowl of pasta for a mid-race six-pack.

Do Drinkers Exercise More than their Sober Peers?
Those who drink more may also be more likely to exercise, new research suggests.
(Getty Images)

"The group runs once a week and on full moon nights at various locations in and around Boston, [stopping] once or twice for a 'beer check,'" says member Keith Fine, of Quincy, Mass. He adds that at the end of the run, the entire group meets at a bar or restaurant to continue the drinking in earnest.

Since its creation in 1938, the philosophy of this band of merry runners is to "promote physical fitness," "get rid of weekend hangovers" and "acquire a thirst and satisfy it in beer," according to their Web site, Bostonhash.com.

"I Googled running clubs when I moved back to Boston after grad school in Florida," Fine said. "I ran with a few different ones, but the hash was the most fun."

This marriage of drink and exercise may sound bizarre, and pairing the two activities so closely is dangerous, not advisable and certainly not the norm for most exercisers.

However, new research suggests that more moderate regular drinking and regular exercise may go hand in hand more often than we think. Read more...

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