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Welcome to February, 2007 "News of Hope" 

Opening up a newspaper, turning on the daily news, or a simple search on the internet will quickly reveal that ALCOHOL is the NUMBER ONE drug problem among our nation's youth.

MADD reports that more than 6,000 people died in 2002 from underage-drinking-related causes (alcohol-related traffic fatalities, homicides, suicides, and other unintentional injuries). Over 2,200 of these were alcohol-related traffic fatalities. The total cost attributable to the consequences of underage drinking was $61.9 billion per year in 2001 dollars.

THE STOP ACT: Just this last December, our nation's government finally acknowledged that underage drinking is a serious issue and that solving this problem is a priority - Congress passed into law the STOP Act.

This month's newsletter INCLUDES information of importance on the STOP Act and the changes that this piece of legislation will bring to your community. We've gone further to share key insights into why adolescents drink, the problems that this behavior causes, and what YOU CAN DO to not only protect your own teen but other teens as well. Because, even if your own teen does not drink, they are still at risk from the dangerous situations that develop when other teens drink.

In this month's issue:
- STOP Act Details
- Underage Drinking Statistics
- Free Prevention Guide and Planner
- Article on Underage Binge Drinking
- Why Adolescents Drink
- Free Brochure on talking you your kids about alcohol

Great insights from Past Newsletters

                             Underage Drinking Prevention Underage Drinking

 Congress Passes First Major Underage Drinking Law: STOP Act
A bill that's being called an important first step towards addressing the national problem of underage drinking was approved by both the U.S. Senate and House this week, and heads to President Bush's desk for approval.

The Sober Truth on Preventing (STOP) Underage Drinking Act, which was initially approved on a 373-23 vote in the House of Representatives on Nov. 14, passed the Senate by unanimous consent on Dec. 6 and won final approval in a slightly amended form in the House on Dec. 7. Bush is expected to sign the bill into law.

"Passage of the STOP Act represents a long-overdue acknowledgment of the need to do more as a nation to address the harm caused by underage drinking," said George Hacker, director of the alcohol policies project at the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), a strong supporter of the bill. "Unlike illicit drugs, there has been no credible national plan to combat alcohol problems, by far the greater health and safety drag on our nation. That is a huge gap that must be filled, and the STOP Act is a step in the right direction."

Major provisions of the STOP Act include a $1-million annual national media campaign on underage drinking; $5 million in grants to help community coalitions address underage drinking; $5 million in grant funding to prevent alcohol abuse at institutions of higher education; requiring the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to produce an annual report on state underage-drinking prevention and enforcement activities; establishing a federal interagency coordinating committee on underage drinking; and authorizing $6 million for research on underage drinking.

"Congress has never passed a bill on underage-drinking before," David Jernigan, executive director of the Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth (CAMY) at Georgetown University, told Join Together. "HHS has never been required to keep an eye on the issue to this extent. The annual report will be a great tool and will keep [underage drinking] from falling off the agenda."
Many facets of the bill were based on the recommendations found in the "Reducing Underage Drinking: A Collective Responsibility" report, released in 2003 by the Institute of Medicine and the National Academy of Sciences.

"Through the hard-hitting public-service ads funded under the measure, parents will get a strong message about the dangers of underage drinking," said Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-Calif.), the lead sponsor of the measure along with Rep. Tom Osborne (R-Neb.).

Sen. Mike DeWine (R-Ohio) and Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) sponsored the Senate version of the bill. Roybal-Allard is poised to become a member of the majority on the House health appropriations committee, which advocates say will help ensure that the STOP Act gets fully funded going forward.

The passage of the STOP Act was notable not only for the bipartisan backing it received in Congress but also for its broad range of outside supporters, including familiar addiction groups like the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Leadership to Keep Children Alcohol Free, Mothers Against Drunk Driving, Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America; public-health organizations and alcohol-industry critics like the American Medical Association, CSPI, and CAMY; faith-based organizations such as the United Methodist General Board on Church and Society and the Southern Baptist Convention; and alcohol-industry leaders like the National Beer Wholesalers Association (NBWA) and the Century Council.

Kim Miller, CSPI's manager of federal relations, said that the alcohol industry, which opposed the STOP Act for years, finally came to the table after being approached by Osborne. The current bill represents a compromise crafted in negotiations that saw the industry succeed in removing language it found objectionable -- including a call for a ban on alcohol ads at NCAA sports events -- while retaining enough of the core legislation to satisfy public-health leaders, said Miller.

"At the end of the day, we all came to an agreement," said CAMY's Jernigan. Added Craig Purser, president of the NBWA: "This was a good example of people with different agendas checking their differences at the door and finding something to work on together."

Purser told Join Together that he hopes that there will be other areas where the industry and "the folks on the control side" can work together. "We're hopeful that this is the beginning of something good," he said.

--Bob Curley www.jointogether.org

___________________________________________________________
Important Statistics on Underage Drinking

Underage Drinking Prevention

Nearly 90 percent of 10th graders and 75 percent of 8th graders think that alcohol is either "fairly easy" or "very easy" for them to get.

Forty percent of children who start drinking before the age of 15 will become alcoholics at some point in their lives. Delaying the use of alcohol until the legal age helps avoid many of the associated problems. If the onset of drinking is delayed by 5 years, a child's risk of serious alcohol problems is cut in half.

Researchers estimate that alcohol use is implicated in one- to two-thirds of sexual assault and "date rape" cases among teens and college students.

Thirty-eight percent of girls ages 12 to 17 have used alcohol at least once. Of these, nearly 19 percent are current users and 7 percent are binge drinkers (have consumed five or more drinks in a row at least once in the past month).

Alcohol use in adolescents is a strong predictor of both sexual activity and unprotected sex. Teenage girls who drink are more likely to have sex and have it without a condom than girls who do not drink alcohol.

Half of the girls who have sexual intercourse by the age of 16 are intoxicated at the time and half later regret their action.

Research suggests that children are less likely to drink when their parents are involved in their lives and when both parents and children report feeling close to each other.

Adolescents drink less and have fewer alcohol-related problems when their parents discipline them consistently and set clear expectations about drinking.

Parents' drinking behaviors and favorable attitudes about drinking have been associated with adolescents' initiating and continuing alcohol use.

In some colleges, as many as 87 percent of nonbinge drinkers experience one or more secondhand effects of other students' misuse of alcohol. These effects include having sleep or study interrupted, having property vandalized, or being the victim of a
physical or sexual assault.

As many as 360,000 of the Nation's 12 million undergraduates will eventually die from alcohol-related problems, many of which began in college. This is more than the number who will get M.A.s and Ph.D.s combined.

Alcohol on college campuses is a factor in 40 percent of all academic problems and 28 percent of all dropouts.

Underage Drinking Prevention Action Guide and Planner

This action guide is intended to help communities create programs to prevent underage drinking by:

Providing community organizers with ideas and suggestions for accomplishable underage drinking prevention activities that target communities, businesses, social events, media, parents and youth

Providing community organizers with ways to coordinate prevention efforts with government agencies, local groups, and other grassroots organizations

Providing factual information about the issues involved in the underage use of alcohol that can be disseminated through your prevention activities and help inform your audiences

The guide is divided into monthly planners, each of which suggest particular themes or issues to focus on underage drinking prevention.

Click here to download your own copy!

 
Most Underage Drinkers Binge, Studies Find

Underage DrinkingA new study finds that high-school students who drink tend to drink heavily, and that young drinkers are more likely to be involved in other risky behaviors, as well, All Headlines News reported Jan. 3.

The study by researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that 45 percent of high-school students say they drink, and of these, 64 percent said that they are binge drinkers, consuming five or more alcoholic drinks at a sitting. Young drinkers also were more likely to engage in sexual behavior, smoke, and get involved in fights.

Binge drinkers were especially at risk of these behaviors. "Our study clearly shows that it's not just that students drink alcohol, but how much they drink that most strongly affects whether they experience other health and social problems," said researcher Jacqueline Miller, M.D.

The study appears in the January 2007 issue of the journal Pediatrics.

 


Why do some adolescents drink?

Underage Drinking PreventionAs children move from adolescence to young adulthood, they encounter dramatic physical, emotional, and lifestyle changes. Developmental transitions, such as puberty and increasing independence, have been associated with alcohol use. So in a sense, just being an adolescent may be a key risk factor not only for starting to drink but also for drinking dangerously.

Risk-Taking-Research shows the brain keeps developing well into the twenties, during which time it continues to establish important communication connections and further refines its function. Scientists believe that this lengthy developmental period may help explain some of the behavior which is characteristic of adolescence-such as their propensity to seek out new and potentially dangerous situations. For some teens, thrill-seeking might include experimenting with alcohol. Developmental changes also offer a possible physiological explanation for why teens act so impulsively, often not recognizing that their actions-such as drinking-have consequences.

Expectancies-How people view alcohol and its effects also influences their drinking behavior, including whether they begin to drink and how much. An adolescent who expects drinking to be a pleasurable experience is more likely to drink than one who does not. An important area of alcohol research is focusing on how expectancy influences drinking patterns from childhood through adolescence and into young adulthood (11-14). Beliefs about alcohol are established very early in life, even before the child begins elementary school.

Sensitivity and Tolerance to Alcohol-Differences between the adult brain and the brain of the maturing adolescent also may help to explain why many young drinkers are able to consume much larger amounts of alcohol than adults before experiencing the negative consequences of drinking, such as drowsiness, lack of coordination, and withdrawal/hangover effects. This unusual tolerance may help to explain the high rates of binge drinking among young adults. At the same time, adolescents appear to be particularly sensitive to the positive effects of drinking, such as feeling more at ease in social situations, and young people may drink more than adults because of these positive social experiences.

Personality Characteristics and Psychiatric Comorbidity-Children who begin to drink at a very early age (before age 12) often share similar personality characteristics that may make them more likely to start drinking. Young people who are disruptive, hyperactive, and aggressive-often referred to as having conduct problems or being antisocial-as well as those who are depressed, withdrawn, or anxious, may be at greatest risk for alcohol problems.

Hereditary Factors-Some of the behavioral and physiological factors that converge to increase or decrease a person's risk for alcohol problems, including tolerance to alcohol's effects, may be directly linked to genetics. For example, being a child of an alcoholic or having several alcoholic family members places a person at greater risk for alcohol problems. Children of alcoholics (COAs) are between 4 and 10 times more likely to become alcoholics themselves than are children who have no close relatives with alcoholism. COAs also are more likely to begin drinking at a young age and to progress to drinking problems more quickly.

Environmental Aspects-Pinpointing a genetic contribution will not tell the whole story, however, as drinking behavior reflects a complex interplay between inherited and environmental factors, the implications of which are only beginning to be explored in adolescents.
Environmental factors, such as the influence of parents and peers, also play a role in alcohol use. For example, parents who drink more and who view drinking favorably may have children who drink more, and an adolescent girl with an older or adult boyfriend is more likely to use alcohol and other drugs and to engage in delinquent behaviors. Researchers are examining other environmental influences as well, such as the impact of the media. In a study of 3rd, 6th, and 9th graders, those who found alcohol ads desirable were more likely to view drinking positively and to want to purchase products with alcohol logos.

--National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

 

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Underage Drinking
Start talking BEFORE they start DRINKING!

Parents play a crucial role in discouraging their children from beginning to use alcohol. The resources below will help parents discuss this important issue with their children and brainstorm ways for them to refuse offers of alcohol from their peers.

Click here to read more on how to talk to your kids about alchohol.

Underage Drinking Prevention

 
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