1 / 14

Binge Drinking Presentation to Safe and Healthy Kids Program County Coordinators

Binge Drinking Presentation to Safe and Healthy Kids Program County Coordinators. Doubletree Hotel Sacramento, CA Sacramento 21, 2004. Presented by: Joël L. Phillips Community Prevention Institute (CPI). Issues. What constitutes excessive alcohol consumption?

grace-guy
Télécharger la présentation

Binge Drinking Presentation to Safe and Healthy Kids Program County Coordinators

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Binge Drinking Presentation to Safe and Healthy Kids ProgramCounty Coordinators Doubletree HotelSacramento, CA Sacramento 21, 2004 Presented by: Joël L. Phillips Community Prevention Institute (CPI)

  2. Issues • What constitutes excessive alcohol consumption? • Is there a problem with excessive alcohol use among California adolescents? If so, to what extent? • What are the consequences of excessive alcohol consumption? • What can we do?

  3. What is Excessive Alcohol Consumption (Binge Drinking)? General Binge (high risk) drinking is the consumption of alcohol to the extent that harmful consequences – health, academic, legal and others – may be expected. Specific (Recent NIAAA definition) A “binge” is a pattern of drinking alcohol that brings the blood alcohol level concentration (BAC) to 0.08 or above. For the typical adult, this pattern corresponds to consuming 5 or more drinks (male), or 4 or more drinks (female), in about 2 hours. A “drink” refers to half an ounce of alcohol (e.g., one 12-oz. beer, one 5 oz. glass of wine, or one 1.5 oz. shot of distilled spirits.)

  4. Dimensions of the Problem Table 1. High Risk Drug Use & Excessive Alcohol Use a Refers to drug use in the past six months only. *Passive parent consent required for participation; starting in 1995, active (written) consent was required.

  5. Excessive Alcohol & High-Risk Drug UsersGrade 11

  6. Trend Data Results The trend data in Table 1 supports several conclusions: • High rate use of alcohol or drugs by California students increases significantly in the middle and high school years. • Despite the emphasis on alcohol and drug prevention in schools, the percentage of students who report high use rates for alcohol or other drugs has been relatively constant over the last decade; 2002-2003 EAU and HRU rates are nearly the same as the 1991-1992 rates. • Excessive alcohol use is more prevalent than high risk drug use. • A substantial percentage of California secondary school students report that they are high rate users.

  7. Binge Drinking Table 2. Frequency Consumed Five or More Drinks in a Row, Past 30 Days • By the 11th grade, approximately one fourth of the student sample reported binge drinking at least once in the last 30 days. • Approximately 12 percent of 11th graders binged 3 or more days in the past month.

  8. Binge Drinkers and Problem Behavior • Binge drinkers are much more likely to put themselves and others in harm’s way through being intoxicated and through drinking and driving. • Binge drinkers are more likely to be involved in gangs and potential violence than students who do not binge. • Binge drinkers are more likely to be involved in relationship violence, and issue of particular relevance to SAPs Table 3. Other Alcohol-use Correlates of Binge Drinking, 11th Graders, 2003 CSS

  9. Binge Drinkers and School Behavior Table 4: Binge Drinking and School Behaviors • Much more likely to use substances at or before school, and to be under the influence of substances at school; • Somewhat more likely to engage in violent or destructive behavior at school; • Much more like to skip school or cut class; and • Tend to have lower connectedness to school.

  10. Summary:What are the Consequences of Excessive Alcohol Consumption Youth with serious alcohol problems: • 11 times more likely to have serious problems with other drugs • 10 times more likely to drink and drive • 4 times more likely to be arrested • 2 times more likely to have a C average or lower and are likely to miss twice as much school • 2 times more likely to smoke • 1.5 times more likely to require hospital emergency care • 5 times more likely to commit suicide • 4 times more likely to get into a serious fight • 3.5 more times more likely to carry a weapon • 3 times more likely to have a conduct disorder • 3 times more likely to be hospitalized with a mental health problem • 2 times more likely to get into an accident, injure another person or themselves • Almost twice as likely to have multiple sex partners (Source: George Washington University Medical Center)

  11. Other Consequences • Binge drinking in High School, especially among males, is strongly predictive of binge drinking in college. (NIAAA) • Young persons who begin drinking before age 13 are four times as likely to develop alcohol dependence and twice as likely to develop alcohol abuse as those who begin drinking at age 21. (National Longitudinal Alcohol Epidemiologic Survey)

  12. What Can We Do? • Recognize there is a serious problem with binge drinking in our schools. • Increase awareness/knowledge of consequences of underage binge drinking/alcohol use (Strategic Goal 4). - Among teachers/administrators - Students - Parents How to do this: Share information with other teachers/administrators. Develop/use talking points on binge drinking strategies /consequences. - Develop flyers (CPI assistance) on the issue - Use teen group meetings to present information in a structured way – must be interactive • Examine current prevention/intervention services.

  13. What Can We Do? (continued) How to do this: • Prevention curriculum, identify binge drinking explicitly. If so, what does it say/recommend? • Do we provide support structures – Student Assistance Programs (SAPs) for our students. If not, look at SDFSC. • Link up with local coalitions (particularly SIG funded counties) to be part of community-wide efforts examining and doing something. How: Contact ADP/CPI to get list of counties funded and or Binge Drinking SIG

  14. www.ca-cpi.org 771 Oak Avenue Parkway, Suite 3 Folsom, CA 95630 916-983-8929-MAIN 916-983-5738-FAX

More Related