Australia faces underage alcohol addicts
February 12th, 2011 - 8:17 pm ICT by IANSSydney, Feb 12 (IANS) Kids as young as 10 years in Australia are undergoing treatment for alcohol addiction, while five teenagers and young people die each week in incidents related to heavy drinking. Recent studies have confirmed experts’ fears that underage drinking is out of control, The Daily Telegraph reported Saturday.
One in five teenagers now regularly binge-drink by the time he or she turns 16. The rate jumps to about 50 percent by the time they turn 18.
According to a national survey of high school students in Australia, it has been found that parents have eclipsed friends and all other sources of supply for young people. One in three children aged 12 to 17 now turns to any of the parents to provide the rocket fuel they want to ignite a party.
Ted Noffs Foundation’s CEO Wesley Noffs said his organisation was being approached to provide residential rehabilitation to minors as young as 10 and 11, while Odyssey House’s boss James Pitts said alcohol was blamed for a 33-year high in admissions.
“When I first started working in this industry 25 years ago I saw case files on 16-year-olds and I was sceptical you could even have a problem at that age,” Noffs said.
“But 10 and 11-year-olds can really have serious drug and alcohol problems, we now know it’s not just rhetoric. We are really not taking this problem seriously.”
A recent study conducted by the Odyssey House, which is one of the country’s biggest rehabilitation centres, found 90 percent of the residents mentioned alcohol as their first drug of intoxication at age 12 or 13.
“These days young people are out there, they’re not slinking around hiding. They are in your face, they’re drinking in public places,” said James Pitts.
Pitts said the short-term risks were obvious with about 264 people aged 15-24 dying annually due to falls, crashes, fights and other alcohol-related incidents.
“The research indicates that the earlier people start to drink, the greater likelihood they will develop problems later in life,” Pitts said.
A study by the National Centre for Education and Training on Addiction found so-called “cool” parents, social networking, availability of supply and a shift in the traditional family structure fuelled a “hedonistic culture” of alcohol abuse.
- 10 yr-olds seek rehab for alcohol addiction in Australia - Feb 12, 2011
- Meet UK's 11-year-old drunk generation - Oct 31, 2010
- Britain's problem drinkers are middle-aged professionals - Mar 09, 2012
- Teen binge drinkers at risk of future bone fractures - Jul 13, 2010
- Teens junking healthy lifestyle kiss happiness away - Mar 04, 2012
- Teens keeping late nights might be into risky behaviour - Mar 05, 2012
- Teen drinking linked to higher internet use - May 10, 2011
- Binge drinking leads to brain damage - Jun 28, 2011
- One in five Aussies abuses, becomes addicted to alcohol in lifetime - Aug 10, 2010
- Bad parenting linked to drinking - Aug 29, 2011
- Isn't your child already sounding a teenager? - Oct 20, 2011
- 72,000 British families lack male role models - Mar 11, 2012
- Parents important for keeping teens off alcohol - Mar 08, 2011
- Kids offered alcohol by people other than parents '6 times likelier to binge' - Nov 08, 2010
- Alcohol intake among Indian teenagers rise - Oct 17, 2010
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