Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Does Your 11-Year-Old Drink Alcohol?

IANS, 06 Mar, 2016 11:48 AM
    Can you imagine an 11-year-old picking up a beer bottle? Scientists have now found that one in seven 11-year-olds in Britain has drunk more than a "few sips of alcohol" at least once -- nearly 14 percent.
     
    According to researchers, it is not possible to make statements regarding cause and effect with this sort of study, but the numbers do show a strong association between 11 year olds drinking and their friends' and mothers' behaviour.
     
    "Drinking in adolescence is considered a 'risky' behaviour, it often co-occurs with other 'risky' behaviours and it is linked to educational failure and to premature mortality, for example via accidental deaths," said lead study author Yvonne Kelly from the University College London.
     
    "Improving our understanding of the factors that influence drinking is important as it has implications for the development of policies and interventions aimed at reducing 'risky' behaviours," Kelly added in the paper published in the journal BMC Public Health.
     
    The team claims this study to be the first of a kind to examine drinking behaviours in early adolescence in relation to a wide range of factors that are linked to alcohol consumption in children.
     
     
    To assess factors that may influence drinking in this age group, the researchers analysed data from 10,498 children aged 11.
     
    The data was collected from cohort members at five time points between nine months and 11 years of age. Interview data, collected during home visits, was available for 69 percent of families when cohort members were aged 11.
     
    The findings showed, children whose mothers drank heavily were 80 percent more likely to drink than children whose mothers did not drink and boys were more likely to report drinking than girls.
     
    Children whose friends drank were five times more likely to drink than those whose friends did not drink.
     
    It was also found that friends' drinking had a stronger association with children's alcohol consumption than parents' drinking.
     
    "Our findings support the need for interventions working at multiple levels, including family and school, to help shape choices around risky behaviours including drinking," Kelly added.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Germ killer in cosmetics may affect newborn's size

    Germ killer in cosmetics may affect newborn's size
    Expecting mothers may take note that exposure to some common germ killers used in cosmetics can lead to reproductive problem and may...

    Germ killer in cosmetics may affect newborn's size

    Women lie more while 'sexting'

    Women lie more while 'sexting'
    Do you exchange sexually explicit message with the opposite sex to either get into the mood or fulfill your partner's fantasies? You may be faking orgasm “non-physically”....

    Women lie more while 'sexting'

    Parents' phone calls put teenage drivers in danger

    Parents' phone calls put teenage drivers in danger
    Instead of helping teenagers drive safely, many parents distract their kids with their pesky calls, says a study....

    Parents' phone calls put teenage drivers in danger

    Horses not affected by rider's sex

    Horses not affected by rider's sex
    Horses do not have a preference for male riders and are not bothered too much about who is riding them. So get on to that saddle now....

    Horses not affected by rider's sex

    Too much twitter may drive you crazy

    Too much twitter may drive you crazy
    If you have a tendency to read and post tweets for several hours a day, watch out for psychiatric disorders...

    Too much twitter may drive you crazy

    Monkey owns copyright for selfie, Wikipedia tells photographer

    Monkey owns copyright for selfie, Wikipedia tells photographer
    A selfie taken by a black macaque on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi three years back has become a tug of war between Wikipedia and the photographer...

    Monkey owns copyright for selfie, Wikipedia tells photographer