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Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Handedness & drinking behaviour

This paper has been published on-line in the British Journal of Health Psychology, print version to follow.
Handedness and drinking behaviour
Kevin Denny
Objectives: A number of papers have investigated whether there is an association between handedness and alcohol consumption hypothesizing that alcoholism may be a consequence of atypical cerebral lateralization or a response to the stress involved in being a minority in a right-handed world. Research to date has mostly used small clinical samples, some without a comparison group. This paper exams this issue using a large population-based random sample.

Design: A large multi-country data set of nationally representative samples of the non-institutional population aged 50 years and older from 12 European countries was used (N=27,428). Methods Logistic regression was used to model the frequency with which individuals self-report the frequency of alcohol consumption. A series of models with differing numbers of potential confounders are estimated. The predictors of frequent and infrequent drinking are investigated separately.

Results: After controlling for a number of confounders it is shown that left-handers do drink more often. However, this is due to them being less likely to drink rarely (less than once a month) or not at all.

Conclusions: The evidence suggests that while there is an association between left-handedness and frequency of alcohol consumption there is no reason to believe that it is associated with excessive alcohol consumption or risky drinking.

4 comments:

  1. Phew, you had me and the other ciotogs of Ireland worried there for a minute! My car insurance could have gone through the roof if the results had been worse...

    Mind you, I wonder should I have to pay less for my life insurance since regular, non-excessive, alcohol consumption is rated more beneficial than no alcohol consumption?

    I'll pitch it to my broker and let you know how I get on.

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  2. Yes it is possible, I suppose, that lefties actually drink too little as there is evidence of some health benefits from moderate drinking. Good luck with your broker. For a modest fee, I can provide an affadavit.

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  3. A natural follow-up would be to examine a measure of alcohol with quantity involved. Its hard to think of one that also has the handedness measure. Perhaps the American Life Panel.

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  4. Yes, some of the American datasets might have it. NCDS has great handedness data but like SHARE asks about frequency of drinking I think.

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