Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Marriage Can Curb Drinking Problem

IANS, 04 Aug, 2015 11:05 AM
    If you are young and already having a drinking problem, finding a partner to tie the knot may help you return to a normal life again, new research suggests.
     
    Marriage can cause dramatic reductions among young people with severe drinking problems, the findings showed.
     
    The researchers used previously collected data from a long-term, ongoing study of familial alcohol disorders.
     
    They examined how the drinking rates of the participants changed as they aged from age 18 to 40, and how this change was affected by whether or not participants became married.
     
    About 50 percent of the participants included in the study of familial alcoholism were children of alcoholics.
     
    "Confirming our prediction, we found that marriage not only led to reductions in heavy drinking in general, this effect was much stronger for those who were severe problem drinkers before getting married," said one of the researchers Matthew Lee from University of Missouri in the US.
     
    "This seems consistent with role incompatibility theory. We believe that greater problem drinking likely conflicts more with the demands of roles like marriage; thus, more severe problem drinkers are likely required to more substantially alter their drinking habits to adapt to the marital role," Lee noted.
     
    The role incompatibility theory suggests that if a person's existing behavioural pattern is conflicting with the demands of a new role, such as marriage, one way to resolve the incompatibility is to change behaviour, Lee explained.
     
    Scientists believe that the findings could help improve clinical efforts to help these people, inform public health policy changes and lead to more targeted interventions for young adult problem drinkers.
     
    The findings appeared in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Modesty holding women back at work: Study

    Modesty holding women back at work: Study
    Do you find yourself holding back in conversations and hiding your true credentials? Ladies, it's time to make a change and banish the barriers and be...

    Modesty holding women back at work: Study

    Parents could drive car choices of kids

    Parents could drive car choices of kids
    What brand of car you drive may influence the car choices of your kids too, says a study.

    Parents could drive car choices of kids

    These days, you need self-control to stay alive

    These days, you need self-control to stay alive
    This writer saved at least five people from being physically attacked yesterday. How? By exercising self-control. "Idiots have a right to live," is the wonderfully....

    These days, you need self-control to stay alive

    Why drinking makes a smile more contagious among men

    Why drinking makes a smile more contagious among men
    Alcohol induces a sort of "social bravery" among men, disrupting processes that would normally prevent them from responding to another person's smile, says....

    Why drinking makes a smile more contagious among men

    Jet fuel oil seed boosts liver detoxification

    Jet fuel oil seed boosts liver detoxification
    Crushed seeds left after oil extraction from Camelina sativa seed, an oilseed crop used in jet fuel, may boost liver detoxification enzymes nearly fivefold, says a study....

    Jet fuel oil seed boosts liver detoxification

    14 percent Britons have partners they have never met!

    14 percent Britons have partners they have never met!
    In an indication of how much the virtual world has become part of our real lives, a survey has found that one in seven people in Britain has relationship...

    14 percent Britons have partners they have never met!