Culture Shapes Young People's Drinking Habits
Article Date: 27 Sep 2008 - 0:00 PDT
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4.13 (8 votes) |
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3.14 (7 votes) |
| Article Opinions: | 2 posts |
Whether young people get drunk as a purposeful behavior or as an unintended consequence depends on what country they live in, according to new research on young people in seven countries. The research finds that young people's views on alcohol and drunkenness were influenced more by culture than by factors such as age and sex.
The research, sponsored by the International Center for Alcohol Policies (ICAP), also finds striking similarities about drinking among young people in different parts of the world including:
-- Their introduction to alcohol was typically by parents during a family celebration;
-- Alcohol consumption was primarily associated with enjoyment and socializing;
-- Drinking mostly took place at gatherings (parties, sporting events) and in public venues (bars, clubs);
-- A "successful drinking experience involved socializing and avoided problems;
-- An awareness of drinking as a means of self-medication.
Data from the focus groups are included in a new book, "Swimming with Crocodiles: The Culture of Extreme Drinking." The focus groups were conducted in Brazil, China, Italy, Nigeria, Russia, South Africa, and United Kingdom.
"Tragically, too many young people purposefully pursue drunkenness as a form of 'calculated hedonism' bounded by the structural and cultural factors that affect young people in different countries," says Fiona Measham, PhD, co-editor of the book and criminologist at Lancaster University.
"We need to work to change this culture of extreme drinking," says Marjana Martinic, PhD, co-editor and vice president for public health at ICAP. "We need to look at cultures in countries like Italy and Spain where moderate drinking is an ordinary, every-day part of family life."
Research on young people's drinking shows that rates of drunkenness and extreme drinking are significantly lower in the Mediterranean countries than in Northern European countries. For example, 49 percent of Swedish 17-year-olds report having been drunk, compared with around 10 percent of Italian, French, and Greek youth.
"Changing the culture of extreme drinking requires looking beyond traditional responses and getting all relevant stakeholders involved," concludes Dr. Martinic. "This means governments, the public health community, the beverage alcohol industry, the criminal justice system, and civil society must have a role in reducing extreme drinking among young people."
Dr. Martinic says there are a wide range of interventions to help reduce extreme drinking among young people, particularly interventions at three key settings: school, work, and community.
INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR ALCOHOL POLICIES
1519 New Hampshire Ave, NW
http://www.icap.org
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (2)
Only Half Of The Truth
posted by Hermann T. Meyer on 28 Sep 2008 at 7:11 amWhen ICAP, the International Center for Alcohol Policies (ICAP), sponsors a research report, it is necessary to look twice at "results". It is the institute of the international alcohol industry.
I find it interesting that Spain should be a good example for youth. Switzerland just was "pleased" to get the Spanish way of organized binge drinking imported, which means thousands of young people are invited by an alert on internet pages to a certain place for a drinking night. In Spain many towns get in competition, which one has the bigger botellón. Nobody is responsible, the towns can serve for first aid and the tons of rubbish. This is not much different from binge drinking in the U.K. or in Scandinavia.
I wonder where the study got the material from. They must have left out all the botellón towns.
Another point is the average per head consumption. It is clear, the alcohol industry would like to spread out the consumption more regularly to get a high per head consumption in Scandinavia where it is much lower than in the countries in the south.
One possibility to change drinking culture is to stop alcohol advertising, because it is an important factor in the alcoholic environmental pollution. It makes all prevention to youth unbelievable, worthless. France has Loi Evin, compared with other countries a very good example of legislation against alcohol marketing. I am sure, the ICAP would not agree to propagate this law for other countries.
Guess I'll Have To Read The Book...
posted by Kaye Baker on 30 Sep 2008 at 9:22 amI am grateful for the preceding alert that this may be only "half of the truth". I'm writing a paper, for a social work class on the population "children of alcoholics". Generational subject studies are coming to light for me. I am a child of several generations of men and women who were alcoholics. My grandfather had several brothers who all died young and my father's siblings all died around age 54. Thanks for the research you contribute to!
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