Compared to adolescents who don’t get beer or wine from mom and dad,
teens who do are more likely to access alcohol from other sources,
the study found.
And when parents supply the drinks, teens are more than twice as
likely to binge drink or show symptoms of alcohol use disorder as
youth who don’t have easy access to alcohol.
“Our study shows that there is no rationale for parents to give
alcohol to adolescents younger than the legal purchase age,” said
lead study author Richard Mattick of the National Drug & Alcohol
Research Centre at the University of New South Wales in Sydney,
Australia.
“To reduce the risk of alcohol-related harm, parents should avoid
supplying alcohol to children,” Mattick said by email. “Modeling
responsible alcohol consumption, enforcing strict alcohol related
rules and monitoring of child behavior may also minimize risks of
children using or misusing alcohol.”
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For the study, researchers examined data collected over six years on
1,927 parents and teens ages 12 to 18. Parents and teens separately
reported on any alcohol consumed by the youth in the study.
At the start of the study, when teens were 13 years old on average,
15 percent of them got alcohol from their parents. By the end, when
teens were almost 18 years old, 57 percent got drinks from mom and
dad, researchers report in The Lancet Public Health.
Over that same time, the proportion of teens who had no access to
alcohol declined from 81 percent to 21 percent.
When teens reported only getting alcohol from their parents one
year, they were twice as likely as kids who didn’t get it from their
parents to report having other access to alcohol by the following
year.
This suggests that getting alcohol from parents doesn’t reduce the
chance that teens will be supplied by other people.
Furthermore, parental provision of alcohol did not appear to help
teenagers deal with alcohol responsibly, the researchers found.
At the end of the study, 81 percent of teens who got alcohol from
their parents and from others reported binge drinking, or consuming
more than four drinks on a single occasion, compared to 61 percent
of teens who only got alcohol from others and 25 percent of teens
who only got alcohol from their parents.
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Teens who got alcohol from both their parents and other sources were
also more likely to have symptoms of alcohol use disorders.
One limitation of the study is that the youth were generally
affluent, and results from these families may not reflect what would
happen with low-income youth, the authors note.
In addition, the definition of binge drinking - consuming four
drinks at one time on a single occasion in the past year - may have
underestimated the frequency of this habit for some youth and masked
connections between sources of alcohol and overuse, the researchers
also point out.
Alcohol consumption is also generally lower in Australia than in
other countries, and the study didn’t account for the amount of
alcohol parents gave teens, only whether they did this at all.
It’s also possible parents who thought their teens were already at
risk for problem drinking chose to give their teens drinks at home,
and that this explained why some of these kids also had higher odds
of alcohol use disorders or misuse, noted Stuart Kinner of the
Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Australia, author of an
accompanying editorial.
“This didn’t prevent the children from going on to drink in risky
ways, but the supply of alcohol from parents didn’t cause the
children to drink in risky ways,” Kinner said by email.
Still, the results suggest that parents giving teens alcohol may
backfire.
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“There is a view that if parents provide small quantities of alcohol
to their teenage children and model low-risk drinking, these
children will be less likely to drink in risky ways,” Kinner said.
“The findings of this study suggest the opposite.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2EJzRlG Lancet Public Health, online January
25, 2018.
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