From what I’m getting out of the paper, it’s more like 'students who work out regularly are less likely to get really bad hangovers.' I’m not sure I buy that regular exercise actually lowers the pain of a hangover if you’re drinking the same amount. For me, working out tends to make me feel tipsy faster, so I usually end up drinking less anyway when I do.
Mowing the lawn once a week may qualify as regular exercise, I don't know your methods or yard. Physical work counts, it doesn't need a label or tools...
I wouldn't call it strenuous but it also exceeds what I do and many peers.
My take: friggin Water reduces the severity, those who exercise are likely more hydrated. Feels like propaganda
In context, that's the baseline for all studied ie. nobody was a full on week in, week out couch potato.
The results were then ranked by amount of exercise (from the baseline to ran 10km every day (perhaps)) Vs subjective hangover severity for given alcohol per body weight dose.
That makes sense. A small benchmark for entrants otherwise just measuring and reporting on vibes. I'm not good with non-computer stuff. I think the word is "control", but will completely admit to taking liberties
From what I’m getting out of the paper, it’s more like 'students who work out regularly are less likely to get really bad hangovers.' I’m not sure I buy that regular exercise actually lowers the pain of a hangover if you’re drinking the same amount. For me, working out tends to make me feel tipsy faster, so I usually end up drinking less anyway when I do.
Probably something to do with higher metabolism…
> All participants did at least 30 minutes of moderate physical activity per week.
Is 30 minutes of moderate physical activity per week really "regular exercise"? Seems to me mowing the lawn once a week would qualify.
Mowing the lawn once a week may qualify as regular exercise, I don't know your methods or yard. Physical work counts, it doesn't need a label or tools...
I wouldn't call it strenuous but it also exceeds what I do and many peers.
My take: friggin Water reduces the severity, those who exercise are likely more hydrated. Feels like propaganda
In context, that's the baseline for all studied ie. nobody was a full on week in, week out couch potato.
The results were then ranked by amount of exercise (from the baseline to ran 10km every day (perhaps)) Vs subjective hangover severity for given alcohol per body weight dose.
That makes sense. A small benchmark for entrants otherwise just measuring and reporting on vibes. I'm not good with non-computer stuff. I think the word is "control", but will completely admit to taking liberties