Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Empty liquor bottles can reveal alcohol use

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Nov, 2014 10:55 AM
    Can counting the empty liquor bottles in dustbins gauge drinking habits of people? Yes, say researchers, adding that this is an inexpensive, unobtrusive and relatively easy method.
     
    The team sorted through recycled bins for empty bottles in a San Diego complex in California for low-income, older adults.
     
    They compared the recycling bin results with two residential surveys gauging drinking habits of people living in the complex.
     
    "We were able to check how much the residents said they were drinking with the empty beer, wine and liquor containers they were actually putting in the recycling bins," said John Clapp, co-author of the study and professor of social work at the Ohio State University.
     
    For the study, the team put two recycling bins on five floors of the residential centre and checked them twice a week for more than a year, collecting all the beer, wine and liquor containers.
     
    They calculated the number of standard drinks consumed by the residents each week.
     
    During the study, 3,014 recycled alcohol containers representing 14,103 standard drinks were collected from the residential centre.
     
    The number of standard drinks estimated from the recycling bins was actually slightly lower than what the 174 residents reported they drank in the survey.
     
    Overall, the researchers estimated that about 10 percent of the residents were at risk for alcohol abuse.
     
    "We got important information from the recycling bins that you cannot get from our two surveys such as time patterns in drinking," he noted.
     
    One of the most important results from the recycling data was that the amount of alcohol use showed a predictable pattern, spiking in the days after the residents received their social security checks and around holidays.
     
    "That is not surprising but it is not something that has been studied before in older adults," Clapp added.
     
    The study appears in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Women lie more while 'sexting'

    Women lie more while 'sexting'
    Do you exchange sexually explicit message with the opposite sex to either get into the mood or fulfill your partner's fantasies? You may be faking orgasm “non-physically”....

    Women lie more while 'sexting'

    Parents' phone calls put teenage drivers in danger

    Parents' phone calls put teenage drivers in danger
    Instead of helping teenagers drive safely, many parents distract their kids with their pesky calls, says a study....

    Parents' phone calls put teenage drivers in danger

    Horses not affected by rider's sex

    Horses not affected by rider's sex
    Horses do not have a preference for male riders and are not bothered too much about who is riding them. So get on to that saddle now....

    Horses not affected by rider's sex

    Too much twitter may drive you crazy

    Too much twitter may drive you crazy
    If you have a tendency to read and post tweets for several hours a day, watch out for psychiatric disorders...

    Too much twitter may drive you crazy

    Monkey owns copyright for selfie, Wikipedia tells photographer

    Monkey owns copyright for selfie, Wikipedia tells photographer
    A selfie taken by a black macaque on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi three years back has become a tug of war between Wikipedia and the photographer...

    Monkey owns copyright for selfie, Wikipedia tells photographer

    Brain judges trustworthiness of faces at first look

    Brain judges trustworthiness of faces at first look
    Even before you consciously see the face of a person, your brain can judge his/her trustworthiness, says a study...

    Brain judges trustworthiness of faces at first look