Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Is Divorce the Next H1N1 Virus?

A new study that has been described by some (including me) as ‘flawed’ seems to suggest that divorce might be contagious.

Researchers say that if a close friend divorces, then the chances of your own divorce increases by 75 percent. They claim that a divorce has ripple effects on loved ones, close relatives, friends and even coworkers.

The research, which was led by Dr. Rose McDermott, tracked more than 12,000 Americans living in Framingham, Mass. The researchers looked into the lives of the people since 1948. According to McDermott, “These results go beyond previous work intimating a person-to-person effect to suggest a person-to-person-to-person effect. Individuals who get divorced may influence not only their friends, but their friends’ friends as the propensity to divorce spreads.”

The researchers also say merely knowing more divorced couples greatly increase your risk of divorce. The researchers also said a friend’s friend divorce negatively affects your own marriage’s chances of succeeding.

But critics of the study say that the premise of the research is flawed. They claim that the researchers culled their data from a previous 1948 work called “Framingham Heart Study.” They claim that the Framingham Heart Study makes it almost impossible to know the reason for the divorce.

~~~~~~

I’m all for social research, really I am, but it’s also the most difficult type of scientific study to perform with success. There are often way too many variables to be able to reach any type of true scientific conclusion. I think this study is utterly ridiculous. The researchers used a small sampling of people and took mismatched (sorry for the pun) data, reached a bogus conclusion then expanded that to the general population.

Divorces happen for as many reasons as there are couples, just like marriages. It is simple-minded to believe you can ‘catch’ divorce from your neighbor’s failing relationships, any more than you can ‘catch’ love from your married friends.

What do you say we stop wasting any more research funds on this type of nonsense, and put real effort into understanding human behavior, and what makes and breaks adult relationships.

— The Curator

6 comments:

  1. hey, just stumbled across your blog, love it!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I want to know close friend divorces, then why the chances of your own divorce increases by 75 percent?
    I am looking forward to know about it.
    Thanks
    uk phone sex

    ReplyDelete
  3. It's very intereting article.
    I am looking to know that how our own divorce increases by 75% if we get divorce to our close friend.
    Humiliating Sex

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks for the kind comments tastyskull! To you others regarding the article, have NO clue -- think this study is very messed up!

    ReplyDelete
  5. You have so much knowledge about this issue, and so much passion. You also know how to make people rally behind it, obviously from the responses

    ReplyDelete
  6. I really enjoyed this post, especially the “examples in this post” portion which made it really easy

    ReplyDelete