SOME FACTS ABOUT OUR COLLEGE KIDS
Alcohol a Dangerous Crash Course at U.S. Colleges By
Adam Marcus TUESDAY,
April 9 (HealthScoutNews) -- On any given day, alcohol is responsible for the
deaths of nearly four college students, injuries to another 1,370, and almost
200 sexual assaults. That's
the sobering conclusion of a new government survey on alcohol's dangerous grip
on the nation's campuses. "These
numbers paint a picture of a deeply entrenched threat to the health and
well-being of our young people," Dr. Raynard S. Kington, acting director of
the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, said in a statement
today. The
findings appear in the March issue of the Journal of Studies on Alcohol.
They were also presented today in Washington, D.C., at a press conference for
the Task Force on College Drinking, which commissioned the research. Alcohol
claimed the lives of more than 1,400 students in 1998 -- 1,100 in traffic
accidents -- caused 500,000 injuries, and led to 70,000 sexual attacks and date
rapes, the study found. More than 600,000 students reported being assaulted by a
drunken student. Dr.
Marc Schuckit, an alcohol expert at the VA San Diego Healthcare System, and
editor of the Journal of Studies on Alcohol, said the results should
raise alarms among parents and campus officials who don't believe college
drinking is a significant problem. "These
pretty highly functional kids are having a lot of trouble from alcohol. The
colleges might not be paying as much attention as they should to some pretty
serious consequences of college drinking," Schuckit said. The
study extrapolated national accident statistics to the campuses, using the
percentage of people between the ages of 18 and 24 who are enrolled in college.
The researchers also reviewed survey results from both students and non-students
to find out rates of binge drinking, drunken driving, assaults, and injuries
while intoxicated. Some
3,200 non-students in the 18-to-24 age range died in 1998 of injuries associated
with drinking. College students make up almost a third of this group, and the
researchers said they assumed the overall death rate associated with alcohol was
the same for students and non-students. "We
didn't want to inflate the figures," said Ralph Hingson, a Boston
University alcohol researcher and lead author of the study. Yet
college students are more likely than their non-student peers to say they binge
drink -- about 40 percent of students say they consumed five or more drinks at a
time (four or more for women) at least once in the last month -- and a quarter
admit to driving while intoxicated. As a result, Hingson said, his group
believes their estimates for deaths among students are likely conservative. Anthony Tommasello, a substance abuse expert at the University of Maryland in Baltimore,
said the number of deaths "sounds high." But, he added, "given
the strong relationship between binge drinking and fatal auto crashes, and the
high incidence of binge drinking among college students, it may be
plausible." Heavy
drinking on campus is a serious but not insurmountable problem, Hingson said.
Counseling, especially at emergency rooms and trauma centers, has been shown to
reduce repeat injuries related to alcohol. Campus
restrictions on alcohol consumption, especially those that target underage
drinkers, are also helpful. So, too, are partnerships between schools and the
communities and merchants that surround them to raise awareness of alcoholism
and problem drinking. To
reduce the toll of drunken driving, Hingson said states need to lower the legal
blood alcohol limit to 0.08 from 0.10 (32 have so far), aggressively enforce
seat belt laws and give police the power to strip licenses from people caught
intoxicated behind the wheel. States
should also consider raising the price of alcohol, although he admits that this
step would punish poor citizens who enjoy alcohol casually. "If you raise
prices, it has a particular effect on younger people," who don't earn
enough money to absorb the increase. William
Burns, senior policy director at the American Association of Colleges and
Universities, said the latest findings "don't sound far off," given
the number of students in this country (there were 8 million in 1998). "As
horrible as death statistics and injuries are, this represents the tip of an
iceberg of the kinds of activities that interfere with learning," Burns
said. Part
of the problem, he said, is that American higher education has lost sight of why
young people should be in school. Many campuses view students as temporary
tenants when they should be considered precious resources, he said. Accidents
aside, excess drinking is terribly disruptive to school work, he said -- as is
worrying about what happened during a liquor-induced blackout the night before a
test, or fretting over a summons for a bar fight during a lecture. "We
don't really at this point value students enough. We need to have their full
attention all of the time." On
the other hand, Burns said, drinking does play an important social role on
campus -- and it's not clear that imposing a "dry" environment is
something college administrators can or should do. What
To Do Thursday
is National Alcohol Screening Day. Alcoholism screening will be offered at more
than 550 colleges and universities, and about 2,000 other sites nationwide. Find
a screening site
near you. For
more on the dangers of heavy drinking, try the NIAAA,
which also has a page on drinking
on campus. You
can also try the National Commission Against
Drunk Driving.
Here is some new research I got from Join Together Online on 6/13/02. More than one in three College Students can be diagnosed with Alcohol Disorders. Press Release: College
Alcohol Study, http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/cas/ One in every five frequent heavy episodic drinkers can be diagnosed with alcohol dependence. Boston, MA - A new study shoes that six percent of college students meet criteria for a diagnosis of alcohol dependence (also referred to as alcoholism), and 31 percent meet the clinical criteria for alcohol abuse. The study found that more than two of every five students report at least one symptom of these conditions, putting them at increased risk of developing a true alcohol disorder. Previous studies on college drinking have concentrated on the type, frequency and amount of alcohol consumed. This is the first study to assess the actual extent of alcohol diagnoses among college students. "Heavy drinking is most often regarded as a behavior problem only," said John R. Knight, Principal Investigator of the study and an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at the Harvard Medical School. "Our study indicates that many students who drink heavily are at high risk of true mental disorders - alcohol abuse and dependence. Alcohol dependence especially may become a lifelong illness, and more should be done to recognize and help students at risk." The findings were released today by the researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health College Alcohol Study (CAS) http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/cas. The article appears in the May issue of the Journal of Studies on Alcohol.
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