Parents Info
Not all
kids in Owen County drink, yet all teens are at
risk. A recent survey reported that 55 of Owen’s
students in grades eight through 12 have tried
alcohol. In addition, 22% of the teens said they
drank within one month of the survey, and 16%
reported binge drinking (five or more alcoholic
beverages in a row) within two weeks of the study.
The
numbers rise dramatically in higher grades. More
importantly, most teens don’t believe their parents
would find out if they were drinking. They’re
probably right. A significant number of Kentucky’s
parents don’t believe their teen is drinking -—
they believe “it’s somebody else’s kid.” At least
half of them are wrong.
The question you have to ask is “do you really
know?”
Many Kids Sip Alcohol Before Age 10
January
7, 2008
About 40 percent of children ages 8 to 10 have
tried alcohol, often without the knowledge of their
parents, according to a new study.
HealthDay News reported
Jan. 4 that most of the children said they had only
tasted alcohol, not consumed an entire drink. But
about one-third of parents whose children reported
alcohol use had no idea they had done so.
Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh and
the University of Michigan surveyed 452 children
and their families via telephone.
"If one only asked about drinks, one would have the
impression that few children at these ages have had
experience with alcohol, whereas the reality is
that nearly seven times as many have had some
experience," said researcher John Donovan of the
University of Pittsburgh. "Second, alcohol is most
often sipped by children in the family context or
during religious services, and almost never with
friends or when alone. Third, children in families
in which the parents drink are at greater risk for
having sipped or tasted alcohol as young as age
eight or 10."
However, the researchers said that sipping alcohol
at a young age did not appear to be associated with
any other problem behaviors.
The study was published in the January 2008 issue
of the journal
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental
Research.
Teens Who Drink to Deal with Anger
Teens Who Drink to Deal with Anger Called High-Risk
January 4, 2008
Teens who reported that they sometimes drink alcohol to cope with anger or frustration were more likely to exhibit a range of high-risk drinking behaviors, USA Today reported Dec. 25.
Researchers who conducted a national survey of 1,877 high-school seniors found that 36 percent reported drinking just to experiment, while 32 percent said they drank for the thrill of the experience, and 15 percent said they used alcohol to relax.
However, 18 percent of seniors cited multiple reasons for drinking, including to deal with anger or frustration, and these students were more likely to get drunk during the day, get drunk frequently, and to have started drinking by the sixth grade. Zila Sloboda of the International Society for Prevention Research said that such drinkers may not be receptive to prevention messages that focus on the dangers of alcohol use, but could respond to interventions that help them deal with their frustrations.
The study led by Lori Palen of Pennsylvania State University appears in the December 2007 issue of the journal Prevention Science.