Articles by author: Brock University

  • Warning labels ‘distort’ views of alcohol’s effects, says Brock expert

    EXPERT ADVISORY – OCTOBER 16, 2025 – R0122

    As Senate considers legislation to add cancer warning labels to alcohol packaging across Canada, a Brock University expert says the proposed change will mislead consumers and skew perceptions of alcohol’s effects.

    Brock University Professor and Chair of Health Sciences Dan Malleck says the labels, if approved, would “present a highly unbalanced and distorted understanding of the effects of alcohol on the human body and, more importantly, on human life.”

    Malleck studies alcohol in the social and cultural environment and researches the history of alcohol policy. His work has shown that during the temperance movement of the 19th and early 20th centuries, misleading impressions of the effects of alcohol were used to advance prohibition.

    “Today’s proposed warning labels perpetuate that pattern,” he says, as they associate alcohol with highly risky behaviour to encourage people to abstain from drinking.

    While there are some risks associated with alcohol consumption, there are also “clear benefits that are ignored with such labelling,” Malleck says.

    Research shows that moderate drinking is protective against cardiovascular disease, the single biggest cause of premature deaths in Canada and the United States, he says.

    Additionally, a detailed report by the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine released in December 2024 concluded that moderate alcohol consumption reduces the risk of all-cause mortality, which is the total number of deaths in a population due to any cause.

    The proposed warning labels, however, focus on a narrow group of cancers for which risk increases marginally from alcohol consumption. This does not accurately portray the full picture, Malleck says.

    “Saying ‘alcohol causes cancer’ is misleading since ‘cancer’ is a broad spectrum of conditions,” he says. “Moderate alcohol consumption has been linked to a slightly increased risk of seven forms of cancer, most of which are highly treatable.”

    According to the Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction (CCSA), the risk of developing oral cavity and pharynx cancer — the cancer with the highest risk from alcohol — increases approximately 90 per cent at 14 drinks per week.

    “That means someone who drinks 14 drinks per week nearly doubles their likelihood of contracting a cancer that is relatively rare,” Malleck says, adding there’s more to consider in this data.

    Data indicates the annual death rate from this form of cancer is 5.2 per 100,000, or 0.005 per cent, Malleck says.

    “A 90 per cent increased risk equals about a 0.0098 per cent rise, meaning 9.8 in 100,000 people,” he says. “And that is for people who consume 14 drinks a week, which is on the high end of previously accepted drinking guidelines. This is likely not describing people who enjoy a glass of wine at dinner, even if they have two on the weekends.”

    Bill S-202 — a revival of legislation shelved when the spring election was called earlier this year — has prompted comparisons between tobacco and alcohol packaging that Malleck says are also problematic.

    “The toxicity of tobacco is exponentially higher than that of alcohol,” he says. “To reach the level of cancer risk presented in regular tobacco smoking, a drinker would have to consume so much that they would die of alcohol poisoning.”

    Dan Malleck, Brock University Professor and Chair of Health Sciences, is available for media interviews on this topic.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    *Sarah Ackles, Communications Specialist, Brock University [email protected] or 289-241-5483 

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Food insecurity in Niagara rising at ‘alarming’ rate: Brock research

    MEDIA RELEASE – OCTOBER 16, 2025 – R0121

    There are more people experiencing food insecurity in Niagara than previously thought, according to a new Niagara Community Observatory (NCO) policy brief.

    The brief’s author, Brock University Adjunct Professor of Political Science Joanne Heritz, says “hunger in Niagara is more pervasive than most of us realize,” because some programs supporting those who are food insecure have previously been overlooked when collecting data.

    Currently, Heritz says estimates of people requiring food assistance are mainly derived from the numbers of families and individuals accessing food banks.

    From 2022 to 2024, food bank use has increased 154 per cent in Pelham and 148 per cent in both Niagara-on-the-Lake and St. Catharines-Thorold.

    But these estimates don’t always account for people who receive congregate meals to meet their household nutritional needs, she says. Congregate meals are breakfasts, lunches and dinners offered by religious organizations and other groups that are eaten either on site or at home.

    “Organizations are doing their programs in isolation, which makes it difficult to get an idea of how pervasive hunger is across Niagara,” says Heritz. “We really don’t have a handle on the amount of resources being used, or needed, for these programs.”

    The “Increasing Hunger in Niagara: The Need for Action” brief documents the supply and demand for food assistance in the region, identifies factors contributing to food insecurity and provides recommendations for reducing food insecurity.

    The policy brief lists 19 organizations that co-ordinate programs offering breakfasts, lunches or dinners at various times during the week. This network of locations in Fort Erie, Niagara Falls, Port Colborne, Wainfleet, St. Catharines, Thorold and Welland collectively served more than 358,000 congregate meals in 2024.

    Heritz says these pre-made meals supplement or even replace food bank assistance, since many people who attend congregate meal programs live in rooms without access to kitchen facilities that allow them to cook for themselves.

    “My goal is to heighten awareness of the hundreds of thousands of congregate meals served and increases in food bank visits with the hope that this information will result in the allocation of more financial resources and affordable housing for people facing hunger in Niagara,” she says.

    Housing and food security are also integrally linked, Heritz says.

    “The housing crisis means increases in the cost of housing, especially for renters,” she says. “This means there is less money for food, which has increased considerably since the pandemic.”

    The housing crisis and food insecurity disproportionately affect Niagara’s vulnerable populations, Heritz says.

    “The unhoused, Indigenous Peoples, Black people and asylum seekers generally have lower incomes compared to the general population. Those who are housed also have a greater tendency to be renters,” she says.

    The policy brief also includes recommendations for the federal, provincial and local governments, including:

    • Raising the minimum wage and increasing social assistance amounts, particularly the Ontario Disability Support Program and Ontario Works.
    • Monitoring congregate meal programs to get a more accurate picture of the number of food insecure people in Niagara and across Ontario.
    • Funding food banks and community meals.
    • Increasing the supply of affordable housing.
    • Providing adequate shelter with three meals a day to meet the needs of unhoused people in Niagara.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    *Sarah Ackles, Communications Specialist, Brock University [email protected] or 289-241-5483 

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    Categories: Media releases