4.0 Article

Paternal and Maternal Problem Drinking and Lifetime Problem Drinking of Their Adult Children

Journal

TWIN RESEARCH AND HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 152-163

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/thg.2023.12

Keywords

Adult children; alcohol drinking; cohort studies; problem drinking; parents

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Parents' alcohol use is associated with alcohol use of their adolescent offspring, and this association extends to the adulthood of the offspring. This was found in a prospective study using a population-based Finnish twin-family cohort. The study showed that parental problem drinking was modestly associated with lifetime problem drinking of their adult children, even when the children had reached their thirties.
Parents' alcohol use is associated with alcohol use of their adolescent offspring, but does this association extend to the adulthood of the offspring? We examined associations of paternal and maternal problem drinking with lifetime problem drinking of their adult offspring prospectively assessed in a population-based Finnish twin-family cohort (FinnTwin16). Problem drinking (Malmo-modified Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test) was self-reported separately by mothers and fathers when their children were 16. The children reported on an extended lifetime version of the same measure during their mid-twenties (21-28 years) and mid-thirties (31-37 years). 1235 sons and 1461 daughters in mid-twenties and 991 sons and 1278 daughters in mid-thirties had complete data. Correlations between fathers' and their adult children's problem drinking ranged from .12 to .18. For mothers and their adult children, these correlations ranged from .09 to .14. In multivariate models, adjustment for potential confounders had little effect on the observed associations. In this study, parental problem drinking was modestly associated with lifetime problem drinking of their adult children. This association could be detected even when the children had reached the fourth decade of life.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.0
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available