Alcohol, especially in the form of beer, is the
most abused legal drug among adolescents. Though legal for use by adults,
the purchase, possession, and use of alcohol by minors (persons under the
age of 21) is illegal in Missouri and most other states.
That
hasn't stopped more than half of Missouri's high-school seniors from
admitting, when surveyed recently, that they have had an alcoholic
beverage. According to the 2000 Missouri Student Survey, 33 percent of
Missouri high-school seniors reported binge drinking (consuming five or
more drinks during one drinking occasion) at least once during the two
weeks prior to the survey. In the Monitor The Future Survey for 2000, 30
percent of high-school seniors nationwide reported binge drinking at least
once during the two weeks prior to the survey.
The problem of
underage drinking in Missouri often does not begin in high school. By 8th
grade, 56 percent of the students have tried alcohol. It is thought that
more than 80 percent of Missouri students will have tried alcohol by the
time they finish the 12th grade.
The Role of Adults
It's not
surprising, therefore, that Missouri school children tell researchers that
their attitudes toward drinking are shaped more by what they see at home
than from what they hear and see among their peers. A majority of them
said their first experience with alcohol was at home in the presence of
their parents.
Drinking is seen as an adult activity by
adolescents and drinking is a way to appear older, more mature, or "cool"
among friends. Peer pressure plays a big role. But adults play a bigger
role, for somewhere along the way, an adult has to make it possible for an
adolescent or teenager to obtain what they cannot obtain legally on their
own - whether it is an unscrupulous merchant who sells it, the adult
friend who shows off by buying it, or the uncaring or unthinking parent
who provides it.
Tragic Results
The consequences
of underage drinking are often tragic. Alcohol often plays a role in the
three leading causes of deaths of teenagers and young adults: motor
vehicle crashes, homicides, and suicides.
If the underage drinker
escapes immediate death or harm, there are long-range effects to worry
about. Studies show the younger a person starts to drink, the more likely
the person is to become dependent on alcohol. Especially worrisome to
prevention and treatment professionals is the tendency of underage
drinkers to drink to excess each time they drink, leading to passing out
and blackouts (inability to recall or remember personal actions while
intoxicated).
Adolescents who drink are at special risk because
their bodies are still developing. Excessive drinking can arrest or delay
development of a young person's sexual organs and characteristics. It also
can cause damage to brain cells that research has linked to the
development of alcoholism in persons not already hereditarily prone to the
disease.
What to Do?
What can parents
do? Community 2000 teams in many towns and cities have enlisted the help
of parents to pledge not to make alcohol available to each other's
children, while other groups have solicited similar pledges from local
merchants not to sell to minors. Still other groups have lobbied to have
laws against underage drinking strengthened and enforced.
Further Reading
For additional information on this and other related
topics, visit the websites of the National Institute on Alcoholism and
Alcohol Abuse ( http://www.niaaa.nih.gov/), and the National
Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information, NCADI, ( http://www.health.org/).
For more information,contact the
Missouri
Department of Mental Health, Division of Alcohol and Drug Abuse
P.O.
Box 687, 1706 East Elm
Jefferson City, MO 65102
573-751-4942
1-800-364-9687