That "quick" beer after work may – with blurry hindsight – not have been the best idea, but a study has revealed social drinkers take fewer days off sick than those who are teetotal.
Researchers found that moderate tipplers – unlike the extremes of heavy boozers or those who abstain totally – have the best health.
And they discovered that teetotal people studied in the UK, Finland and France had a higher risk of absence from work for a host of ailments, including mental disorders, problems of the muscles and bones, and illnesses of the stomach and lungs, the Daily Mail reports.
The researchers excluded from their results those who had stopped drinking explicitly for the sake of their health, but warned that abstinence could be linked to a number of medical reasons that were included in the study.
Lead author Dr Jenni Ervasti, of the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health, said: 'Some diseases, or their treatment, prevent alcohol use, which may explain the excess risks among abstainers.