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Childhood Loneliness Can Result In Drinking Problems Among Young Adults


 Over 300 college students participated in the study, completing assessments of
childhood loneliness, current stress levels and drinking behaviours.
(Representative image)

Over 300 college students participated in the study, completing assessments of
childhood loneliness, current stress levels and drinking behaviours.
(Representative image)


Arizona State University has come to the conclusion that loneliness before a child turns 12 years old, can push them toward suffering from a great deal of alcohol use and alcohol use-related issues

  • ANI Washington
  • Last Updated: July 19, 2022, 17:52 IST
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The findings of new research suggest that experiencing loneliness as a pre-adolescent child can have a drinking problem years later, in early adulthood.

Alcohol misuse is not the only health problem connected to loneliness. In older adults, loneliness contributes to poor physical health, including dementia, heart disease and stroke.


Researchers from Arizona State University examined the effects of experiencing childhood loneliness on current stress levels and drinking behaviours in young adults.

The study will be published in Addictive Behaviors Reports.

“In young adults, childhood loneliness before age 12 was associated with perceived stress right now and affected dysregulated drinking,” said Julie

Patock-Peckham, assistant research professor in the ASU Department of

Psychology.

Because stress affects whether people drink to excess, especially women, the research team tested whether past experiences with loneliness impacted the

stress people feel today.

Over 300 college students participated in the study, completing assessments of

childhood loneliness, current stress levels and drinking behaviours.

Feeling lonely in the past was related to present-day stress levels and drinking

behaviours.

Higher levels of loneliness before age 12 predicted more stress in early

adulthood that was associated with greater alcohol use and alcohol-related

problems.

“The data used in this study were collected before the pandemic and the

findings suggest that we could have another public health crisis on our hands

in a few years as today’s children grow up,” Patock-Peckham said.

“We need more research into whether mitigating childhood loneliness could be a way to disrupt the pathways that lead to alcohol use disorders in adults. Combating childhood loneliness should help to reduce impaired control over drinking, especially among women.”



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