BBC News - New method to tackle binge drinking in young people

15 September 2010 Last updated at 13:40 ET

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New method to tackle binge drinking in young people

By Katie Alcock Science Reporter, BBC News
Glass of wine Many students do not know what a '"unit" of alcohol looks like.

Researchers at Aston University have come up with a new way to help young people control their drinking.

They found over 500 students from universities in the UK had no idea what a "unit" of alcohol looks like or what safe levels of alcohol intake are.

The Aston team established that giving the students feedback on how their drinking compares with peers reduced their consumption.

The study was presented this week at the British Science Festival.

Dr Richard Cooke, one of the researchers, asked students at three UK universities to define "binge-drinking" in terms of government approved "units" of alcohol.

He found they didn't understand how much a unit is or how many would constitute "binge drinking".

"I'm not sure that people keep track in terms of units; I think they keep track in terms of how many drinks they've had," he told BBC News.

Dr Cooke and researcher Alice King found that techniques used on people with serious drinking problems in A&E departments could be adapted to help reduce student drinking.

Interventions for problem drinkers involve feedback from doctors and nurses to help them see what their problem is and how they might solve it.

Dr Cooke said for students who don't realise their drinking levels are high the key is to get them to compare themselves to other people their own age.

The researchers told the students how much they drank in comparison to figures for other students.

In their study almost all students thought they were less likely to be a binge drinker than the average student.

The researchers found giving students feedback on how their drinking compared with their peers was helpful in reducing their drinking.

Dr Cooke believes this kind of feedback might work well face-to-face in a GP surgery for patients who aren't currently seen as problem drinkers.

One way to facilitate comparison of levels of drinking (as with anything) is to allow those who choose to do so to do so openly without fear of legal repercussion. It makes more sense to me to supervise young people under the influence instead of consigning them to find places to 'party' where they won't get 'busted', and where they are more likely to suffer alcohol poisoning or perhaps even be left to die by fellow partiers afraid of the trouble in which they'll end up. It also makes more sense to allow them to speak freely about what they're doing, which they can't in an atmosphere of, "Just say no (or we'll fine you or throw you in jail)".

Posted via email from Peace Jaway

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