UNDERAGE
         DRINKING 
         
         
          
         
         Protect Curry
         County's Youth
         
         Underage Drinking
         in Curry County - DHS issued January, 2008
         Page
         1,
         Page
         2 
         Adult alcohol
         use in Curry County - DHS issued January, 2008
         Page
         1,
         Page
         2 
         Ways
         to Have Fun without Drinking 
         Blood
         Alcohol Concentration (BAC) Affect on Motor
         Skills 
         Snippets 
         Fight
         the Stigma of Alcohol 
         Is
         She Drinking? 
         Sobering
         Data On Student DWI Habits 
         Drunkenness
         Triples College Kids' Auto Injury
         Risk 
         Keeping
         Tabs On Teens May Curb Alcohol Use And
         Risks 
         Smoking,
         Drinking At School May Be Contagious For
         Teens 
         Sign
         the MADD "PROMise To Keep It
         Safe" 
         Students
         Pledge Month of Alcohol
         Abstinence 
         N.J.
         Parents Advocate for Nickel Tax Increase to Fund
         Treatment 
         Related Issues: Binge
         Drinking,
         Talk
         to Your Kid about Alcohol
         & Drugs,
         Fun
         Without Drinking,
         Booze
         in a Can 
         
          
         Oregon law encourages parents to supply alcohol to their
         children. It doesn't limit the type of alcohol "for
         religious purposes" but does make it unlawful to give
         alcohol, outside the home, to other than their children and
         not at an intoxicating level which means it would be a
         maximum of 2-5 12-ounce bottles of 5% beer, 2-5 ounces of
         hard liquor, or 10 to 25 ounces of wine in one hours time.
         (Those are the average limits to reach a .08 on a
         breathalyzer for a 100 to over 240 pound person. 1 drink
         equals 1 ounce of 100-proof liquor, one five ounce glass of
         table wine or one 12-ounce bottle of regular
         beer) 
         
          
         What is not understood, is that possession can also be
         within the body, so the minor must stay within the parents
         property until the alcohol leaves the
         system.  
         
         
            
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                  Alcohol
                  Use
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                   . 
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                  8th
                  Grade
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                  11th
                  Grade
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                   Age of
                  onset 
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                   7% drank
                  regularly before 13 
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                   19% drank
                  before 13 
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                   Use in
                  Past 30 days 
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                   29% 
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                   38% 
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                   Perception
                  of Risk or Harm 
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                   34% believe
                  there is "great risk" for people who have one or
                  more drinks nearly every day 
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                   33% believe
                  that there is no harm in taking one or more drinks
                  daily 
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                   Perception
                  of disapproval of use by peers and
                  adults 
                | 
               
                   71% parents
                  would think is was "very wrong" for someone their
                  age to us alcohol 
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                   80% believe
                  that their parents would feel it is wrong for them
                  to drink 
                | 
             
          
          Source: Oregon Healthy Teens Survey,
         2004
         
          
         Underage drinkers account for nearly 20 percent of the
         alcohol consumed in the United States each year. 
         
          
         Alcohol is the #1 youth drug problem (SAMHSA, 2003); it
         kills more people under 21 than all other illicit drugs
         combined. (Grunbaum, 2002) 
         
          
         The same amount of alcohol is in a 12-ounce bottle of beer,
         a 12-ounce wine cooler, and a 5-ounce glass of
         wine. 
         
          
         Almost 23% of 12 to 20 year olds participated in binge
         drinking at least once in the past month.
         Source: Substance Abuse And Mental Health Services
         Administration, 2004 
         
          
         Binge drinking is 4 drinks within an hour for a female, 5
         for a male. Females process alcohol differently than males;
         smaller amounts of alcohol are more intoxicating for females
         regardless of their size. (NHTSA, 2004) 
         
          
         Female college students drink more and have sex more while
         on Spring Break trips. 
         
          
         Over a quarter of all rape victims and over 40 percent of
         those convicted of rape had been drinking at the time of the
         attack. (BJS, 1998 ) 
         
          
         You may be alive today because the legal drinking age is 21.
         The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)
         estimates these laws have saved over 22,000 lives from 1975
         to now. (NHTSA, 2004) 
          
         
         Ways
         to Have Fun without Drinking 
         
         
          
         
          
         
         
            - Go to a late-night
            diner all dressed up and order fries and a milkshake;
            it'll hit the spot and you'll get tons of
            attention!
 
            
            - Buy a bunch of
            one-use cameras, pass them around to your friends, and
            set a goal to use every last picture before the night is
            through!
 
            
            - Have a "Cranium"
            or "Act One" party at someone's house; don't forget to
            have lots of sodas, chips, and dips. You'll be hungry
            after all that dancing!
 
            
            - Host a karaoke
            party at your house, in a friend's barn, or at a local
            Elks or Rotary lodge.
 
            
            - Visit an arcade
            with your date or with a group, and challenge each other
            to a game or two.
 
            
            - Have a dance-off
            at the local arcade. Couples against couples. It's a
            blast.
 
            
            - Ask your local
            YMCA if you can plan an after-prom basketball tournament.
            Bring your favorite CDs to play in the
            background.
 
            
            - Go to a late night
            coffee house and relive the evening for
            hours!
 
            
            - After prom, gather
            in a friend's house or backyard, take your shoes off,
            turn up the music, and really dance! Don't forget to
            notify neighbors and police of your special event, and
            don't let guests come and go.
 
          
         
         Source:
         www.madd.org/under21/0,1056,1168,00.html
           
         
         Think about
         it! 
         
         
         Blood
         Alcohol Concentration (BAC) Affect on Motor
         Skills 
         
         
            - At .020
            light to moderate drinkers begin to feel some
            effects.
 
            
            - At .040
            most people begin to feel relaxed.
 
            
            - At .060
            judgment is somewhat impaired, people are less able to
            make rational decisions about their capabilities (e.g..
            driving).
 
            
            - At .080
            there is a definite impairment of muscle coordination and
            driving skills; this is legal level for intoxication in
            some states.
 
            
            - At .10
            there is a clear deterioration of reaction time and
            control; this is legally drunk in most
            states.
 
            
            - At .120
            vomiting usually occurs. Unless this level is reached
            slowly or a person has developed a tolerance to
            alcohol.
 
            
            - At .150
            balance and movement are impaired. This blood-alcohol
            level means the equivalent of 1/2 pint of whiskey is
            circulating in the blood stream.
 
            
            - At .300
            many people lose consciousness.
 
            
            - At .400
            most people lose consciousness; some die.
 
            
            - At .450
            breathing stops; this is a fatal dose for most
            people
 
             
          
         
         Snippets 
         
          
         
         Beer accounts for 67% of the alcohol consumption reported in
         the US. 
         
         Beer consumed by the
         highest 10 percentile of drinks by volume represents 42% of
         the reported alcohol consumer in the US 
         
         Beer is
         disproportionately consumed in hazardous amounts (i.e., five
         or more drinks per occasion) relative to wine and
         spirits. 
         
         Nearly 82% of adults
         favor an increase of five cents per drink in the tax on
         beer, wine or liquor to pay for programs to prevent minors
         from drinking and to increase alcohol treatment
         programs. 
         
         Alcohol excise tax
         rates have rarely been increased to compensate for the
         effects of inflation. As a result, "real" tax rates have
         declined over most of the postwar period. This erosion of
         real tax rates has contributed to overall declines in real
         beverage prices over time. 
         
         In 1998, the estimated
         economic cost of alcohol abuse in the US exceeded $184
         billion. This cost is equivalent to roughly $683 for every
         man, woman and child living in the US. 
         
         The cost to Americans
         of underage drinking totals nearly $53 billion, equivalent
         to $200 for every man, woman and child in the US 
         
         Each year, the federal
         government spends between $900 million and $1 billion on
         alcohol prevention services for people of all ages, less
         than 2% of the annual cost of alcohol use by youth
         alone. 
         
         According to the
         Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, federal excise tax
         collections for alcoholic beverages totaled more than $8
         billion in 2000. Put into perspective, this amounts to just
         over 4% of the $184 billion in alcohol-related costs
         experienced by the American public. 
          
         
         Fight
         the Stigma of Alcohol 
         
         
          
         
         April is National Alcohol Awareness Month. Talk with your
         kids about the risk. 
         
         
            - Approximately 22%
            of 8th graders, 41% of 10th graders, and 50% of 12th
            graders report having consumed alcohol during the past
            month.
 
            
            - About 8% of 8th,
            23% of 10th, and 32% of 12th graders report having been
            drunk during the past month.
 
            
            - About 14% of 8th,
            26% of 10th, and 30% of 12th graders report binge
            drinking during the past two weeks.
 
            
            - Alcohol is
            frequently a factor in the three leading causes of death
            (motor vehicle crashes, homicides, and suicides) for 15
            to 24 year olds.
 
          
         
         Source:
         www.ncadd.org/programs/awareness/alcfacts02.html
           
          
         
         Is
         She Drinking? 
         
          
         
         An estimated 4.5 million tween and teen girls drank alcohol
         last year, but most moms say they never knew about it.
         Sixteen percent of 13- to 16-year-olds admitted they drink
         with friends, while only five percent of moms think their
         daughter is drinking, according to a survey of
         mother-daughter pairs by the Century Council, a group of
         leading alcohol producers. Thirty percent of 16- to
         18-year-old girls drank, but just nine percent of the
         mothers were aware. 
         
         Try exploring
         www.girlsanddrinking.org
          
         with your daughter, and start getting real honest about
         drinking. When girls and adults share the truth on why and
         how they drink, girls get great guidance for better
         choices. 
         Source: Daughters, May/June, 2006 
          
         
         Sobering
         Data On Student DWI Habits 
         
          
         
         In the March 4 issue of CMAJ, Dr. Edward Adlaf and
         colleagues present data from the 2001 Ontario Student Drug
         Use Survey, which indicate that 31.9 percent of 1846 Ontario
         students surveyed admitted to being a passenger in a car
         driven by a drunk driver in 2001. 
         Source: Canadian
         Medical Association Journal,www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8895/361838.html
           
          
         
         Drunkenness
         Triples College Kids' Auto Injury Risk 
         
         
          
         
         It also greatly raises risks for falls, sexual abuse, study
         finds. 
         Source:
         www.healthcentral.com/newsdetail/408/525819.html
           
          
         
         Keeping
         Tabs On Teens May Curb Alcohol Use And Risks 
         
          
         
         Adolescents whose parents closely monitor their activities
         are less likely to use alcohol or to be in risky situations
         involving alcohol, suggests new research published in the
         American Journal of Health Behavior. 
         Source:
         Center for the Advancement of Health, www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8895/361561.html
           
          
         
         Smoking,
         Drinking At School May Be Contagious For Teens 
         
          
         
         Teens are more likely to share smoking and drinking habits
         with their peers when they attend schools with a relatively
         large number of students who use tobacco or alcohol,
         according to a new study. 
         Source: Center
         for the Advancement of Health, www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8895/361560.html
           
          
         
         Sign
         the MADD "PROMise To Keep It Safe" pledging to remain
         alcohol-free on prom night. In return for your responsible
         choice, receive a BuzzFree ID to get great prom discounts
         and incentives (offers available vary by
         market). 
         Source:
         www.buzzfreeprom.com/students/students_pledge.html
           
          
         
         Students
         Pledge Month of Alcohol Abstinence 
         
          
         
         At Waterville High School in Waterville, Maine, four hundred
         students and teachers declared that they would abstain from
         alcohol use for the next thirty days. 
         Source:
         www.jointogether.org/news/headlines/communitystories/2006/students-pledge-month-of.html
           
          
         
         Calif.
         Hearing Targets 'Alcopop' Marketing 
         
          
         
         Flavored alcoholic malt beverages -- a.k.a. 'alcopops' --
         appeal to children and often are packaged to closely
         resemble soda, witnesses told a California Senate
         panel. 
         Source:
         www.jointogether.org/news/headlines/inthenews/2006/calif-hearing-targets.html
           
          
         
         N.J.
         Parents Advocate for Nickel Tax Increase to Fund
         Treatment 
         
         
          
         
         The Parents to Parents Coalition (P2P), a group advocating
         for New Jersey to raise its alcohol tax by a nickel a drink
         to provide more funds for addiction treatment, recently took
         its case to Gov. Jon Corzine, the Cherry Hill
         Courier-Post reported. 
         
         Members of the group
         -- many of whom have lost children to drug overdoses -- came
         to Rowan University for a Corzine budget speech. They
         presented Corzine with one of the glass jugs that they are
         using to collect nickels as part of the campaign. 
         
         The proposed tax
         increase could raise $10 million for treatment, they said,
         roughly doubling current state spending. 
         
         "I'm tired of burying
         people we should be treating," says Joni Whelan, CEO of the
         SODAT (Services to Overcome Drug Abuse Among Teenagers)
         treatment program. 
         Source:
         www.jointogether.org/news/headlines/inthenews/2006/nj-parents-advocate-for.html
           
         
         Think about
         it!
         
         
            
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