Healthy tips, updates, information and news feeds for patients and families of the Dartmouth Medical Center.
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Social Networks and Drinking
Social networks may influence alcohol consumption.
The Time (4/5, O'Callaghan) "Wellness" blog reported, researchers recently "found that, like so many other things, drinking habits can be contagious: if a close connection...drank heavily -- defined as an average of one drink per day for women and two drinks per day for men -- participants were 50% more likely to drink heavily themselves; if someone connected by two degrees of separation (a friend of a friend) drank heavily, participants were 36% more likely to do so." The "social impact of drinking continued to three degrees of separation -- that is, if your friend's mom's cousin drinks heavily, you're about 15% more likely to do so too -- but disappeared after four degrees of separation," according to the paper in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
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