Publication | Closed Access
Alcohol Problems in Adoptees Raised Apart From Alcoholic Biological Parents
888
Citations
14
References
1973
Year
Parental CareSubstance UseHospital DiagnosisPsychiatric DisordersMental HealthSocial SciencesPsychologyAlcohol MisuseFamily InteractionPsychiatryAlcohol ProblemsAlcohol AbuseAlcohol ControlDrinking ProblemsAlcohol DependenceChild DevelopmentSubstance AbuseSociologyPediatricsDrinking PracticesMedicineFamily Dynamic
The study examined drinking practices and other life experiences in 55 men adopted away from alcoholic biological parents, noting that their adoptive parents had comparable socioeconomic status and similar rates of alcoholism and psychiatric disorders. Adoptees raised apart from alcoholic parents were more likely to develop drinking problems and receive psychiatric treatment, had a threefold higher divorce rate, but showed no other psychopathological differences, indicating a possible genetic influence.
Drinking practices and problems, plus a wide range of other life experiences, were studied in a group of 55 men who had been separated from their biological parents early in life where one parent had a hospital diagnosis of alcoholism. Compared to a matched control group of adoptees, significantly more of them had a history of drinking problems and psychiatric treatment. The two groups did not differ with regard to other forms of psychopathology, such as depression or character disorders. Children of alcoholics had three times the divorce rate of the controls. Apart from alcohol problems and divorce, the two groups did not differ significantly with regard to any other variable studied. The adoptive parents of index and control subjects were of similar socioeconomic class and had similar rates of alcoholism and other psychiatric disorders. These findings suggest that genetic factors may play a role in the development of alcohol problems.
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