Average person spends two years of their life with a hangover

Brits will spend two years of their lives feeling hungover - and rely on a fry-up, a lie-in and a hair of the dog to get them through it, a study has found.
Average person spends two years of their life with a hangoverAverage person spends two years of their life with a hangover
Average person spends two years of their life with a hangover

The poll of 2,000 Brits found the average adult suffers one hangover a month - 12 a year.

That means the equivalent of two years - or 724 days - will be spent recovering from the night before over the average adult lifetime.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The study, commissioned by health supplement supplier Healthspan, also found water is the most popular hangover cure, followed by a lie-in, a shower, fresh air and painkillers.

Average person spends two years of their life with a hangoverAverage person spends two years of their life with a hangover
Average person spends two years of their life with a hangover

Dr Sarah Brewer, GP on behalf of Healthspan said: “During the month of December alone around 30 glasses of wine, 22 pints of beer with an average consumption of 62 units and 4,000 calories are consumed in the run up to Christmas.

“Everyone has a go-to hangover cure which helps them feel a bit more alive again.

“It seems simply drinking water is what most people swear by and sales sore of products like fizzy effervescent tablets at this time of year as people are trying boost lagging energy levels due to festive party hangovers.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The research also found some people could be putting their health at risk with their hangover cure, with their go-to relief being effervescent tablets because they rehydrate, plus vitamin C helps combat fatigue and tiredness.

Average person spends two years of their life with a hangoverAverage person spends two years of their life with a hangover
Average person spends two years of their life with a hangover

But these tablets can be having the opposite effect, as some may contain as much as salt as two bags of crisps - with salt linked to high blood pressure and cardiovascular disease.

Three in ten people also admitted they crave salty foods when they feel hungover, with a bacon sandwich, a fry-up and pizza among the most popular meals to tuck into.

Other popular hangover cures include lounging on the sofa watching TV or spending the day in bed, a roast dinner or gorging on chocolate and crisps.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Fizzy, sugary drinks and tea and coffee are also among the top 10 ways to treat a hangover.

While the average adult suffers one hangover a month, almost one in 20 people claim they battle the effects of too much alcohol six or more times a month - especially during the festive period.

The survey also revealed the chaos hangovers wreak on everyday activities.

One in four people have turned up late to work while battling their hangover, while one in ten admit to having made mistakes due to their fuzzy head.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Others have overslept (40 per cent), missed an appointment (10 per cent) or even cancelled another social event (22 per cent) because they couldn’t face another night out.

Rob Hobson, Healthspan head of nutrition, said: ‘It’s all about being prepared and making some simple changes like interchanging water in between drinks, giving your liver a little helping hand with products like milk thistle and re-hydrating the body with vital nutrients it has lost.”

Top 20 hangover cures

1. Water

2. A lie-in

3. A shower

4. Fresh air

5. Painkillers

6. A fry-up

7. A cup of tea or coffee

8. Watching TV on the sofa

9. A day in bed

10. Fizzy/sugary drinks

11. A bacon sandwich

12. Hair of the dog

13. Vitamin C effervescent supplements

14. Going for a jog/ exercise

15. Chocolate

16. Fruit

17. A roast dinner

18. A Bloody Mary

19. Crisps

20. Bananas

Top 10 things you never knew about a hangover

1. Age matters - they do get worse with age

2. Studies reveal women suffer worse hangovers than men due to possessing fewer of the enzymes that metabolise alcohol

3. Avoid strong coffee as it actually dehydrates the body

4. Choose your fizzy hangover cures wisely as some contain well over the recommended allowance of sodium - which in the long term could ramp up your blood pressure

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

5. The stronger the alcohol the quicker the blood levels raise so you get drunk quicker so think about the types of drinks you are drinking

6. Alcohol has a general anaesthetic effect on the brain. Initially it ‘anaesthetises’ pathways involved in inhibitions which is why you lose your social brakes, then it anaesthetises other areas so you feel woozy and lose those essential motor skills etc.

7. Shaky hands are caused by alcohol relaxing the arteries and dehydration - reducing your blood pressure

8. Throbbing temples and headaches are down to dehydration of the brain, and to the effects of toxins such as acetaldehyde which the liver is unable to process quickly enough to clear them if you are drinking lots in one go.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

9. Alcohol irritates the digestive system and increases acidity - BUT dry biscuits can help mop this up.

10. Eggs contain cysteine - an amino acid thought to mop up the toxins that build up in the liver. So boiled eggs and soldiers are a good option.