Who Drinks More -- Couples or Singles?
People
who are married or live together drink less than single people, according to a
new study.
The
findings show that "once you're in a committed relationship, your drinking
frequency declines permanently, whereas quantity goes back up if you exit that
relationship," said lead author Diana Dinescu, a doctoral candidate in
clinical psychology at
the University of Virginia.
The
researchers looked at more than 2,400 twin pairs (about 1,600 female pairs and
more than 800 male pairs). They found that those who were married drank less alcohol and
drank less often than those who were single or divorced.
This
isn't the first study to show that married adults drink less than their peers
without partners. But by focusing on twins, the authors said genetic
predispositions and differences in upbringing would be less likely to affect
the results.
"It
seems that intimate
relationships may provide a real benefit in terms of drinking
behavior, maybe through mechanisms such as a monitoring effect that partners
have on each other," Dinescu said in a university news release.
The
researchers found that twins who lived with a partner drank more often than
married twins, but consumed lower amounts of alcohol than those who were
single, divorced or widowed.
While
men in common-law relationships drank
less per occasion than married men, women in common-law relationships drank
about the same amount per occasion as those who were married, according to the
study.
The
results were published recently in the Journal of Family Psychology.
Source: www.webmd.com
19.08.2016
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