Physical Wellness

Relationship Between Tattoos, Piercings and Alcohol Consumption

By Mark Smith | Update Date: Apr 17, 2012 01:27 AM EDT

Tattoos and body piercings have become so popular in western societies that many consider them fashion trends. 

However, researchers found the relationship between tattoos, piercings and alcohol consumption. More alcohol per liter of exhaled breath was related to tattooing and body piercing, according to a new study in France.

"A host of previous studies have routinely shown that individuals with body piercings or tattoos are more likely to engage in risky behavior than non-pierced or non tattooed people," said Nicolas Guéguen, professor of social behavior at the Université de Bretagne-Sud and corresponding author of the study. 

Guéguen conducted his first-of-its-kind survey on four different Saturday nights, when most French youth frequent bars and clubs before dancing, collectively approaching a total of 2,970 individuals ─ 1,710 males, 1,260 females ─ as they were exiting drinking establishments. The young men and women were asked if they wore tattoos and piercings or not, and were then requested to breathe into a breathalyzer in order to evaluate their alcohol consumption.

"We found that pierced and/or tattooed individuals had consumed more alcohol in bars on a Saturday night than patrons in the same bars who were non pierced and non tattooed," said Guéguen. "This is the first time that we found a relation among tattoos, piercings, and alcohol consumption in France." 

He suggested that educators, parents and physicians consider tattoos and piercings as potential "markers" of drinking, using them to begin a conversation about alcohol consumption as well as other risky behaviors.

"I thought the approach to studying this topic was fascinating," said Myrna Armstrong, professor at the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center and author of some of the studies cited by Guéguen. "However, I am concerned with the tendency to see a tattoo or piercing and automatically profile or stereotype that individual as a 'high-risk person' as this may or may not be conducive for helping them. A clinician, for example, can spend some time not judging individuals about their present tattoos, but talking to them about safe tattooing, etc. and alcohol in general not because they have tattoos or piercings but because they are in a high-risk age group."

"In 2009, we conducted a study of those with one to two, three to four, and five or more tattoos," she said. "We found that those with only one tattoo were very similar to those without any tattoos in terms of high-risk behaviors, including alcohol. We also graded body piercings and found that individuals with seven or more were the really high-risk group. In other words, be very careful about generalizing among those with many tattoos or piercings and those with only one."

Results will be published in the July 2012 issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research and are currently available at Early View. 

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