Visiting a bar, regularly makes a person more socially engaged, feel more contented in their lives and more likely to trust other members of their community.
Highlights
- Frequently visiting a local pub can directly affect peoples social network size.
- Social networks provide us with the single most important buffer against mental and physical illness.
The study also showed that those who drank at local pubs tended to socialise in smaller groups, which encouraged whole-group conversation, while those drinking in city-centre bars tended to be in much larger groups, and participated much less in group conversation.
Professor Robin Dunbar of the University of Oxford’s Experimental Psychology department, said: ‘This study showed that frequenting a local pub can directly affect peoples’ social network size and how engaged they are with their local community, which in turn can affect how satisfied they feel in life.
Social networks provide us with the single most important buffer against mental and physical illness. While pubs traditionally have a role as a place for community socialising, alcohol’s role appears to be in triggering the endorphin system, which promotes social bonding. Like other complex bonding systems such as dancing, singing and storytelling, it has often been adopted by large social communities as a ritual associated with bonding.
Colin Valentine, CAMRA’s National Chairman, said, “Personal wellbeing and happiness have a massive impact not only on individual lives, but on communities as a whole. It will be of no surprise to CAMRA members that pubs play such a pivotal role in a person’s wellbeing, but it is fantastic news to hear that this wisdom has now been confirmed by research."
Reference
- R. I. M. Dunbar et al., Functional Benefits of (Modest) Alcohol Consumption, Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology (2016) doi:10.1007/s40750-016-0058-4.