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HomeHarm ReductionIn-laws’ alcohol use increases own risk of drinking problems

In-laws’ alcohol use increases own risk of drinking problems

A study of more than 300,000 couples in Sweden has found that marriage to a spouse who grew up exposed to parental alcohol misuse increases a person's likelihood of developing a drinking problem, reports the Association for Psychological Science.

The research from Virginia Commonwealth University in the US and Lund University in Sweden, has just been published in the journal Psychological Science.

The statistics are sobering. More than 14 million American adults suffer from some form of alcohol use disorder (AUD), a chronic inability to stop or control alcohol use despite the negative consequences. This is according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, a part of the National Institutes of Health.

The causes of AUD are complex and can include a mix of genetic, environmental and social factors, including a family history of alcoholism. This familial effect, however, may be more complicated than first assumed.

A family connection

According to the material from the Association for Psychological Science, the research has uncovered a previously unrecognised family connection to AUD: the drinking habits of a person's in-laws.

The study suggests that marriage to a spouse who as a child was exposed to parental alcohol misuse increases that person's likelihood of developing AUD, even if the spouse does not have a drinking disorder.

"Our goal here was to examine whether a spouse's genetic makeup influences risk for AUD," said Jessica Salvatore, an assistant professor of psychology at Virginia Commonwealth University, and lead author of the paper.

"In a somewhat surprising twist, we found that it wasn't the spouse's genetic makeup that influenced AUD risk. Rather, it was whether the spouse was raised by an AUD-affected parent."

Research and findings

The researchers analysed marital information on more than 300,000 couples in Swedish national population registries, finding that marriage to a spouse with a predisposition towards alcohol use disorder increased risk for developing AUD.

This increased risk was not explained by socio-economic status, the spouse's AUD status, nor contact with the spouse's parents. Instead, the researchers found that, rather than genetics, this increased risk reflected the psychological consequences of the spouse having grown up with an AUD-affected parent.

"Growing up with an AUD-affected parent might teach people to act in ways that reinforce a spouse's drinking problem," said Salvatore. "For example, taking care of a spouse when they have a hangover."

The study's findings underscore the pernicious and long-lasting impact of growing up with a parent with AUD, extending even to the spouses of their adult children.

"It demonstrates the long reach that parental alcohol problems have on the next generation," Salvatore said. "It's not just the offspring of affected parents who are at risk, it's the people those offspring end up marrying, too."

The findings are consistent with evidence from other research labs, she said, which suggests that those who grow up with a parent with an alcohol use disorder may be at particularly high risk of using alcohol as a "tool" to improve their marital interactions.

"These kinds of processes may inadvertently lead a spouse down the path of alcohol misuse," she said. "To be clear, my guess is that these processes are out of people's conscious control. No one wants to 'give' their spouse an alcohol problem."

Social genetic effects

The study's findings are an important contribution to a burgeoning area of research on social genetic effects, or the effects of a social partner's genetic makeup, Salvatore said. Conclusions from previous studies of social genetic effects were limited by the fact that people's genotypes were correlated with their rearing environments. In other words, in prior studies it was difficult to say whether effects were attributable to the partner's genes versus how they were raised because their parents provided both their genes and their home lives.

"What we were able to do in our study was tease apart the effects of the social partner (spouse's) genes and the rearing environment," she said.

"And when we did that, what we found surprised us: It's something about the spouse being raised by a parent with a drinking problem, rather than the spouse's genetic makeup, that influences a person's risk for developing an alcohol problem."

The study's findings could prove valuable when it comes to treating couples struggling with alcohol. The findings reinforce the idea that interventions for substance-use disorders should be administered at the level of a couple or the family (for those who have a partner) rather than at the individual level, Salvatore said.

This study is part of Salvatore's larger body of research that seeks to understand "how the people we love shape the way we drink".

"In the best-case scenario, spouses can be one of our first defences against poor health – they bug us to schedule our annual exams, and they're among the first to notice if we're feeling blue or tipping too many drinks back.

But spouses can also be a liability for poor health," she said. "The results from this study underscore how a spouse's experiences in his/her family of origin can be a risk factor for the development of alcohol problems."

 

Disentangling Social-Genetic From Rearing-Environment Effects for Alcohol Use Disorder Using Swedish National Data

Psychological Science. Published on 20 August 2020.

Authors

Jessica E Salvatore, Sara Larsson Lonn, Jan Sundquist, Kristina Sundquist and Kenneth S Kendler

The authors are from Virginia Commonwealth University in the United States and Lund University in Sweden.

Abstract

Investigations of social-genetic effects, whereby a social partner’s genotype affects another’s outcomes, can be confounded by the influence of the social partner’s rearing environment.

We used marital information on more than 300,000 couples from Swedish national data to disentangle social-genetic from rearing-environment effects for alcohol use disorder (AUD).

Using observational and extended-family designs, we found that (a) marriage to a spouse with a predisposition toward AUD (as indexed by a parental history of AUD) increased risk for developing AUD; (b) this increased risk was not explained by socio-economic status, the spouse’s AUD status, or contact with the spouse’s parents; and (c) this increased risk reflected the psychological consequences of the spouse having grown up with an AUD-affected parent (ie, a rearing-environment effect) rather than a social-genetic effect.

Findings illustrate that a spouse’s rearing-environment exposures may confer risk for AUD.

 

[link url="https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200820195354.htm"]Your in-laws' history of drinking problems could lead to alcohol issues of your own[/link]

 

[link url="https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0956797620931542"]Disentangling Social-Genetic From Rearing-Environment Effects for Alcohol Use Disorder Using Swedish National Data[/link]

 

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