Adult Binge Drinkers Prefer Beer

mooglemania85

Diamond Member
May 3, 2007
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"A binge drinker was defined as someone who had five or more alcoholic drinks on at least one occasion in the last 30 days."

Damn. Apparently I am a binge drinker.

ATLANTA (AP) -- Binge drinkers are more likely to have a beer can in hand than a shot glass, new research shows.

Unless you're talking about teens. They prefer the hard stuff.

The stereotype-shattering findings are reported in two studies by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Access may play a major role in the choices of the two age groups, experts suggested.

For adults, beer is cheaper and easy to find, sold in gas stations and grocery stores. However, for teens, it may be easier to filch free booze from their parents' liquor cupboards, one of the researchers said.

Binge drinking -- no matter which type of alcohol -- is bad for your health. Excessive alcohol is acutely dangerous because of its role in car crashes, violence and other traumatic injury, and is blamed for 75,000 deaths annually.

The study of adult binge drinkers found that nearly 75 percent mainly or exclusively drank beer, 17 percent focused on liquor, and 9 percent were wine drinkers. A binge drinker was defined as someone who had five or more alcoholic drinks on at least one occasion in the last 30 days.

About 15 percent of U.S. adults fit that profile, and most are men, according to federal statistics.

''This is behavior that is common,'' said the CDC's Dr. Timothy Naimi, lead author of a study of 14,000 adult binge drinkers. ''It boils down to drinking to get drunk.''

Researchers also looked at bingers who drank a variety of beverages -- for example, a few after-work beers, a cocktail before dinner and wine with dinner. That research showed beer accounted for 67 percent of binge drinks consumed, liquor for 22 percent and wine for 11 percent.

Beer was expected to be high on the list: It accounts for about 55 percent of the alcohol sold in the United States, as measured by the gallon, according to sales tax statistics.

But the fact that beer is such an overwhelming favorite of binge drinkers contradicts a Hollywood stereotype of hard drinkers clutching a bottle instead of a six-pack.

That perception may help explain why beer is No. 1, Naimi said. Because of a governmental focus on the dangers of liquor, beer is generally less expensive, and easier to get.

The volume of beer advertising on television is also a factor, said Gail DiSabatino, vice president for student affairs at Clemson University.

''If you watch a commercial during any NCAA championship, or the big sporting events, beer is promoted heavily,'' she said.

In a separate study, a different team of researchers looked at 2005 survey data for public high school students in Arkansas, Nebraska, New Mexico and Wyoming. The survey was anonymous. Results were based on about 4,000 responses.

The pilot study found that liquor was the most commonly consumed alcoholic beverage among teens who reported binge drinking. In Arkansas, liquor accounted for 49 percent of binge drinks, with beer, malt beverages, wine and wine coolers making up the rest. The hard stuff also was clearly ahead in Wyoming and New Mexico. In Nebraska, liquor and beer consumption were virtually tied.

Because the study was smaller and more geographically limited, it's difficult to equate it with the national study of adults, DiSabatino observed.

Asked why high school binge drinkers might prefer liquor, DiSabatino noted studies that show many youths get their alcohol from home.

It may be easier to snatch drinks from a liquor cabinet than beers from the fridge. ''It might not be as noticed,'' DiSabatino said.

There are other motivations for teens, said Jennifer Cremeens, a former CDC epidemiologist who co-authored the high school study.

Liquor can be easier to conceal from parents, mixed in a cup with juice or soda. It's also more potent. ''Liquor's quicker,'' Cremeens said.

The study of adult bingers was published for release Tuesday in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, and was based on data from a national random-digit-dial survey done in 2003 and 2004.

The study of teen drinkers was published recently in the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
 

Dunbar

Platinum Member
Feb 19, 2001
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5 or more drinks once a month qualifies as binge drinking? Gotta love these studies and how they try to quantify this sort of thing...
 
Jun 27, 2005
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Originally posted by: Dunbar
5 or more drinks once a month qualifies as binge drinking? Gotta love these studies and how they try to quantify this sort of thing...

Anything to puff the stats and build up that molehill. Then what? You betcha! Get a government grant to look into the horrors of binge drinking and come up with a multifaceted, bipartisan solution that is sensitive to gender, race and sexual orientation while still being 'edgy' enough to keep the kids interested.

Just Say No: Binge Drinking

That'll be $16 billion please.
 

Wreckem

Diamond Member
Sep 23, 2006
9,537
1,103
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I dont drink that often, but 5 drinks in one night qualifies as binge drinking?

5 drinks doesnt even give me a buzz.
 

JD50

Lifer
Sep 4, 2005
11,863
2,697
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Originally posted by: manowar821
Binge drinking or getting drunk is idiotic, but this study is, too.


I can see why you are so uptight over in P&N, I'll try not to give you a hard time anymore.

edit - LOL, didn't you say something about "there is no such thing as being too open minded?...haha
 

purbeast0

No Lifer
Sep 13, 2001
53,478
6,317
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I'm an adult and I don't prefer beer.

There I proved this study false!

(no I didn't read it)
 

bignateyk

Lifer
Apr 22, 2002
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A binge drinker was defined as someone who had five or more alcoholic drinks on at least one occasion in the last 30 days.

About 15 percent of U.S. adults fit that profile, and most are men, according to federal statistics.

LOL. I like the "most are men" part. It amazes me that these idiots get paid to come up with this shit. You'd think the morons would at least take into account BAC, which would at least indicate whether the person who was "binge drinking" was even getting drunk.

If they are arbitrarily pegging men at 5 drinks once a month for binge drinking, women should be pegged around 2 drinks once a month. I think that would even out the statistics a little.

Fucking idiots.
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,484
8,344
126
Meh. Binge drinking != alcoholic.

If I have 1 beer every hour from 12:00-5:00 on NFL Sundays I'm a binge drinker. I'm not going to be drunk during that time. I'm not going to drive during that time. I'm not going to beat my wife. I'm not going to miss work from it.

A lot of your hardcore alcoholics are still clutching their handles of Skol vodka and Canadian Mist whiskey.
 

CKent

Diamond Member
Aug 17, 2005
9,020
0
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Originally posted by: Dunbar
5 or more drinks once a month qualifies as binge drinking? Gotta love these studies and how they try to quantify this sort of thing...

I drove past a liquor store the other day, I'm an alcoholic by some definitions.