Women Are Catching Up To Men's Drinking Habits

One area where breaking the glass ceiling isn’t a good thing.
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According to a new study, the gap between men's and women's drinking habits is closing, particularly among younger drinkers.

Across the world, women now consume nearly as much alcohol as men do, according to a new study.

The findings show that the gap between men’s and women’s drinking habits is closing. This is particularly true for women born in the last 15 to 25 years, the researchers said.

“Alcohol use and alcohol use disorders have historically been viewed as a male phenomenon,” the researchers, from the University of New South Wales in Australia, wrote in the Oct. 24 issue of the journal BMJ Open. “The present study calls this assumption into question” and suggests that efforts to reduce the harms of alcohol use should include young women, the researchers said. [Here’s How Much Alcohol Is OK to Drink in 19 Countries]

In decades past, men typically consumed more alcohol than women and were more likely to experience alcohol-related problems, such as alcohol addiction. Some studies suggested that alcohol use and alcohol-related problems were up to 12 times more common in men than women, the researchers said.

In the new study, the researchers analyzed information from more than 4 million people living in countries around the world, who were born as long ago as 1891 and as recently as the year 2000. The data came from 68 previously published studies that compared men’s and women’s drinking patterns.

The results showed that men born between 1891 and 1910 were 2.2 times more likely to consume alcohol than women born in that time period. But among men and women born between 1991 and 2000, the rates of alcohol consumption were nearly equal, with men just 1.1 times more likely to consume alcohol than women.

Men and women have also become more similar in their rates of problematic alcohol use (such as binge drinking) and their rates of experiencing harm from alcohol (such as alcohol dependence).

Men born between 1891 and 1910 were three times more likely to have an alcohol use problem compared to women born at the same time, but among people born between 1991 and 2000, men were just 1.2 times more likely to have an alcohol use problem. Finally, men in the oldest group in the study were 3.6 times more likely to experience harm from alcohol use compared to women at the time, while men in the youngest group were just 1.3 times more likely to experience alcohol-related harm.

“[These] findings confirm the closing male-female gap in indicators of alcohol use and related harms,” the researchers said.

This was most evident for young adults, born in the most recent years in the study (1990 to 2000).

The researchers noted that their study was not designed to determine whether the closing gap is due to women drinking more alcohol or men drinking less alcohol. But most of the studies suggested that the convergence of men and women’s drinking habits was driven by a greater use of alcohol among women.

The findings also highlight the importance of continuing to track the drinking habits of young adults as they age into their 30s, 40s and beyond, the researchers said.

Original article on Live Science.

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Before You Go

7 Things To Know About Women And Alcohol
1. More Women Are Binge Drinking(01 of07)
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According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates released earlier this year, nearly 14 million women in the U.S. binge drink roughly three times a month. For women, binge drinking is defined as having four or more drinks in a single period, but most women average six drinks per binge. Women with a household incomes above $75,000 are more likely to binge, as are women age 18 to 34 and in high school. According to the CDC, 1 in 5 teenage girls binge drink, a behavior that poses serious health risks, including unintentional injuries, alcohol poisoning, liver disease and stroke, among others. (credit:Getty)
2. Women Drink "Less Well" Than Men(02 of07)
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Women's bodies tolerate alcohol differently than men's for reasons that are not yet fully understood, Slate explains. It may be that the hormone estrogen interacts with alcohol in a way that increases the risk for liver problems, Slate says, or it could be due to differences in stomach enzymes. Plus, as the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) points out, women's bodies have less water per pound than men's. If a man and woman who weigh the same amount drink the same amount of alcohol, the woman will likely have a higher blood alcohol concentration, because alcohol disperses in water and her body has less. (credit:Getty)
3. Drinking Becomes Problematic For Women At Lower Levels ...(03 of07)
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Largely because women's bodies tolerate alcohol differently than men's, they're more likely to be at risk for alcohol-related problems. Those risks include specific health diseases and conditions, such as liver disease, heart disease and breast cancer, as well as alcohol dependence. The NIAAA defines the "low-risk" drinking limit as no more than seven drinks per week for women, and no more than three drinks in any one sitting. For men, it's no more than 14 drinks per week, and four drinks in any one day. (credit:Getty)
4. ... But They Seek Treatment Sooner(04 of07)
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As HuffPost's Amanda Chan previously reported, a new study released earlier this summer, which included more than 500 males and females, found that women who abuse alcohol tend to seek out help four to five years earlier than their male counterparts. Why that is, isn't exactly clear at this point, although in a statement, Rosemary Fama (a senior research scientist at Stanford University, who did not work on the study) hypothesized that women may attach less social stigma to drinking problems than men, and therefore may be more likely to report theirs, according to HealthDay. (credit:Getty)
5. During Pregnancy, No Amount Has Been Proven Safe(05 of07)
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A new book "Expecting Better: Why the Conventional Pregnancy Wisdom Is Wrong and What You really Need To Know" has made waves for challenging many of the beliefs women and their doctors have long held, among them, that drinking during pregnancy is strictly off limits. Occasional drinking may not pose any danger, concludes author Emily Oster, an economist who was inspired to analyze the existing scientific literature when she became pregnant. But the fact remains that no amount of alcohol during pregnancy has been proven to be safe. In other words, there exists no clearly defined threshold at which experts can say alcohol consumption is safe, which is why most advise simply avoiding it altogether. (credit:Getty)
6. Drinking Ups Breast Cancer Risk(06 of07)
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"The use of alcohol is clearly linked to an increased risk of developing breast cancer," the American Cancer Society warns -- and that risk increases with the more alcohol a woman consumes. For example, a woman who sips only one drink a day has a very small increase in overall risk, the ACS explains, whereas a woman who has up to five drinks a day has roughly one-and-a-half times the risk of a woman who doesn't drink at all. That said, drinking is hardly the only risk factor for the disease -- there are many others that contribute, including a woman's lifestyle and her genes. (credit:Getty)
7. Alcoholism May Be Deadlier In Women(07 of07)
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A German study published last year concluded that alcohol dependence is twice as deadly for women as for men. The death rate for alcohol-dependent women was four times that of a sample of comparable, non-addicted, 18- to 64-year-old women, but only double for men. While the "why" is unclear, the research is in line with other studies suggesting the effect of alcohol on women is "particularly harsh," CASAColumbia's vice president and director of policy research and analysis told HuffPost. (credit:Getty)

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