Getting Married By 21 Increases Your Chance Of Becoming An Alcoholic

By Zainab Pervez in Health and Fitness On 24th June 2022
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Getting married by 21 may increase the risk of alcoholism among people who are genetically predisposed to drink more, according to a forthcoming study led by researchers at Virginia Commonwealth University.

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“In a sample of young adults, we found that marriage was not uniformly protective against alcohol misuse. In fact, we found that early marriage (i.e., by age 21) seemed to exacerbate risk for alcohol use among individuals with a higher genetic predisposition,” said study author Rebecca Smith. She is a doctoral student in the Department of Psychology in the College of Humanities and Sciences.

Previous research found that marriage protects against risky alcohol use and moderates genetic influences on alcohol outcomes, but previous studies generally focused on older adult samples.

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“Thus, early marriage does not have the same protective benefit in terms of attenuating genetic predispositions that has been observed for marriage later in adulthood.”

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The study involved a sample of 937 people who reported heavy episodic drinking and marital status between ages 21 and 25. " Early marriage may increase the risk of heavy episodic drinking among people who have high genetic predispositions for alcohol use", according to the study.

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“These findings are important because they demonstrate how risk and protective f actors may intersect in different ways at different points across the lifespan,” Smith said.

Smith said the researchers were somewhat surprised by their findings, given that marriage is generally considered to be protective against poor mental and physical health outcomes.

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“However, when we stepped back to think about what we know about development and developmental psychology, our findings made more sense,” she said. “Traditional life events, such as marriage and parenthood, tend to occur during certain periods in life. So when those types of events occur either earlier or later in life than is typical (in American culture), they may not be as protective as we would expect.”

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“Individuals who marry young may not be the best influences on one another,” she said. “This may create an environment in which other risk factors that contribute to alcohol use, such as genetic predispositions, are exacerbated.”

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Individuals who marry young tend to experience more consequences that are negative and face more challenges, such as mental health and substance use problems, than those who marry at a later age, Smith said. The study’s findings fit within that larger context.

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