| Mission Impossible: Getting drunk on beer |
| Written by DJ Spiess | ||
| Saturday, 19 July 2008 | ||
|
You might have heard about the story going round the internet. A “new” study says it is impossible to get drunk drinking beer. OH RLY? A study by Dr. Leon A. Greensburg, professor of physiology at Yale University, proves with numbers it is impossible to get drunk on beer. His point is the stomach cannot hold enough alcohol to possibly become intoxicated. He’s a professor at Yale with the numbers to back his claim; we have to take him at his word right? A new definition of intoxicationThe good Dr. Greensburg states people will only exhibit abnormal behavior if their blood alcohol content is above 0.15 percent. This number is higher than most state legal limits. Most states will consider you under the influence if your blood alcohol content is somewhere between 0.05-0.08 percent. You are intoxicated if your blood alcohol content is above 0.10 percent. At 0.15 percent, you are loaded.
What is the doctor drinking?The next problem with this study is the Greensburg’s choice of beer. He must be shopping at the grocery store for his beer (in Colorado supermarkets cannot sell beer over 3.2% ABV). He states the average beer content in America is 3.7%. In order for your blood alcohol content to be 0.15 percent, you would need 2.5 quarts of the 3.7% beer in your stomach. The reason he believes you cannot get intoxicated is because the stomach only holds 1.5 to 2 quarts. Your stomach cannot hold the required amount of beer to become intoxicated.
![]() Very few of these beers will be under 3.7% ABV Ever been to a kegger?Further more he states the body destroys or eliminates beer at 1/3 quarts per hour. That is an interesting claim I haven’t heard before. Alcohol is absorbed much quicker into your system than the rest of the beer. Usually you eliminate or metabolize 5-10% of the consumed alcohol in an hour. You might eliminate 1/3 quarts of something, but most of the alcohol is staying inside you.
When was this study again?Here is the clincher. This study happened back in 1955. Why on earth are people reporting it now? The legal limit back in 1955 was 0.15 percent, which is probably why he chose the number as “intoxicated”. Related Articles |
||