November 27, 2007 10:30 AM
- Text
Friends May Sway Teen Girls' Drinking
GENERIC hangover headache alcohol hungover (CBS/AP)
(WebMD)
Teenage girls may be more likely than teenage boys to copy their friends' alcohol use - and more vulnerable to peer pressure, a new study shows.
For the study, more than 1,400 pairs of 14-year-old twins in Finland answered questions about their drinking and their friends.
About two-thirds of the twins - 63 percent of girls and 66 percent of boys - said they never drank alcohol. Similar percentages of boys and girls reported drinking occasionally or at least weekly.
Teenage girls were more likely to report drinking if they had friends who drank, smoke, or who had gotten into trouble at school for bad behavior or dishonesty.
The same wasn't true for boys. So the researchers suggest that girls may be more influenced than boys by their friends.
There was one exception. Girls or boys were more likely to report drinking if they had some friends of the opposite sex.
The twins weren't followed over time. So it's not clear which came first - having friends with risky habits or starting to drink.
The researchers - who included Virginia Commonwealth University's Danielle Dick, Ph.D. - don't chalk up the results to genetics alone. Choice of friends matters, too.
They report their findings in Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
©2005-2006 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved
For the study, more than 1,400 pairs of 14-year-old twins in Finland answered questions about their drinking and their friends.
About two-thirds of the twins - 63 percent of girls and 66 percent of boys - said they never drank alcohol. Similar percentages of boys and girls reported drinking occasionally or at least weekly.
Teenage girls were more likely to report drinking if they had friends who drank, smoke, or who had gotten into trouble at school for bad behavior or dishonesty.
The same wasn't true for boys. So the researchers suggest that girls may be more influenced than boys by their friends.
There was one exception. Girls or boys were more likely to report drinking if they had some friends of the opposite sex.
The twins weren't followed over time. So it's not clear which came first - having friends with risky habits or starting to drink.
The researchers - who included Virginia Commonwealth University's Danielle Dick, Ph.D. - don't chalk up the results to genetics alone. Choice of friends matters, too.
They report their findings in Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
©2005-2006 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved
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