SEATTLE, Sept. 11 (UPI) -- TV shows like "Sex and the City"
may have glamorized drinking, but excessive alcohol is tied to
overeating and depression in young women, U.S. researchers say.
Lead author Carolyn McCarty, a research associate professor
at the University of Washington and Seattle Children's Research
Institute, and colleagues surveyed 393 men and 383 women at ages 24,
27 and 30 about their weight, alcohol use and depression symptoms
within the last year.
"When you look across time, alcohol use and obesity
predicted later depression," McCarty said in a statement.
"The big picture here is that these disorders, though
they're different in manifestation and symptoms, appear to be
related for some groups of women."
The study, published in the September/October issue of the
journal General Hospital Psychiatry, finds women who had alcohol use
disorders at age 24 were more than three times as likely to be obese
at age 27, compared with women who did not.
Women who were obese at age 27 were more than twice as
likely to be depressed at age 30, and women who were depressed at
age 27 had an increased risk of alcohol disorders at age 30. The
same links did not appear in men over time.