Introduction to Alcohol Consumption in Women
Even in Parisian hard-drinking intellectual circles, French philosopher and feminist icon Simone de Beauvoir found that a glass of wine hit harder than expected. De Beauvoir once joked that she felt quite dizzy after two glasses, long before existential debates began. Decades later, science can explain why: women process alcohol differently than men—often faster and more intensely—and women’s brains also respond more strongly to its rewarding effects, even if they drink the same amount as men.
How Alcohol Travels Through the Body
Alcohol affects the body almost immediately. Before it reaches the stomach, taste buds signal to the brain, causing small changes in heart rate, blood flow, and brain chemistry to prepare the body. When you swallow alcohol, a small portion of it is absorbed in the stomach, but most of it enters the small intestine, where it quickly enters the blood. Some of it is broken down in the stomach and liver by an enzyme called alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), a process known as first-pass metabolism (FPM).
Gender Differences in Alcohol Processing
Scientists largely agree that women, on average, feel the effects of alcohol earlier. They disagree as to why this is so. Rainer Spanagel, a neuropharmacologist and addiction researcher, cites body weight as the dominant factor. Ethanol distributes evenly throughout the body, including the brain and organs. Smaller bodies mean smaller compartments, so if a man and a woman drink the same amount of alcohol, the same amount of ethanol accumulates in a smaller body.
Beyond Size: Enzymes, Body Composition, and the Brain
Alcohol begins to work the moment it is consumed and continues to affect the body long after it reaches the brain. Women typically have more body fat and less water than men, so the alcohol becomes more concentrated in their blood. This is in addition to the ADH difference, which is a crucial early filter. Men have more ADH in their stomachs than women, allowing them to metabolize alcohol more quickly in the early stages.
Alcohol Addiction in Women
Once alcohol reaches the brain, women experience a phenomenon known as “telescoping”: a much faster transition from consumption to dependence. They become addicted more quickly and consume larger amounts in a shorter period of time. Hormones also play a role, as estradiol increases dopamine release in the brain, and alcohol indirectly increases dopamine. During ovulation, women tend to like substances more, making them more likely to drink more alcohol. Stress also plays a role, as women are more likely than men to use alcohol to self-medicate for anxiety or depression.
Rethinking Equality at the Bar
The science has social implications. Women need to be aware that not only will they get drunk faster if they drink shots while a man is standing next to them, but also that the long-term consequences can be more devastating. This is not about restriction, but about understanding. Alcohol doesn’t hit harder because women are weaker drinkers. It hits harder because women’s bodies, enzymes, hormones, and brains react differently long before tolerance even comes into play.
