One in Four Teens, Young Adults Binge Drink

CDC Study Binge Drinking

More than one in four high school students and adults ages 18 to 34 reported binge drinking in the past month, according to officials from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC, who said the new data represent a serious public health problem.

Every year, 33 million adults binge drink — defined as four or more drinks for women and five or more drinks for men over a short period of time — and the numbers are not decreasing, said Robert Brewer, MD, MPH, alcohol program leader at the CDC and one of the authors of a new report on binge drinking released Tuesday.

Brewer and CDC Director Thomas R. Frieden, MD, MPH, announced the data on a media teleconference and told reporters that people need to be more aware that drinking to get drunk can result in serious health consequences for themselves and others.

“Binge drinking increases many health risks, including fatal car crashes, contracting a sexually transmitted disease, dating violence, and drug overdoses,” said Frieden. “Excessive alcohol use remains the third leading preventable cause of death in the U.S. and leads to a wide range of health and social problems.”

About half of the 79,000 deaths per year caused by alcohol are connected to binge drinking, said Brewer.

A recent study of 28 teenagers found a link between binge drinking and a loss of white matter in the brain. Another study found binge drinking is especially dangerous for hypertensive men. And in a study from last year of 16,000 military personnel, the 43% of service members who reported binge drinking in the past month were more likely to report problems with job performance, have interactions with the criminal justice system, and drink and drive.

Binge drinking rates were slightly one percentage point higher in 2009 than in 1993, the report found.

One reason the binge drinking rates have stayed steady may be because the public doesnt see binge drinking as a major public health concern, Frieden and Brewer said.

“As a society, we havent really taken it seriously as a public health problem,” Brewer said.

via Medical News: One in Four Teens, Young Adults Binge Drink – in Public Health & Policy, Practice Management from MedPage Today.

About Author: Shevonne Polastre

Shevonne founded Stop Alcohol Deaths, Inc. after losing her sister Kristine to alcohol poisoning. This is her way to bring awareness so no one loses a loved one to alcohol.

  • http://www.facebook.com/BigEventFundraising Clayton Boggess

    Why am I not surprised with this finding? When you consider peer pressure and the fact that we are constantly telling them that ‘drinking is cool’ using various marketing channels, of course they are going to drink which naturally leads to binge drinking. And to add to all of that, most kids who binge drink have probably been watching their parents model this behavior for years. The temptation to binge drink is just too great.

    Clay Boggess
    http://www.BigEventFundraising.com

  • http://www.dcfemella.com dcfemella

    Exactly

  • http://www.dcfemella.com dcfemella

    People seem to equate “having fun” to “drinking ridiculous amounts of alcohol.” People need to be educated that the two don’t go side by side.

  • http://twitter.com/alcoholdeaths S.A.D.

    People seem to equate “having fun” to “drinking ridiculous amounts of alcohol.” People need to be educated that the two don’t go side by side.

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