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UK: Drinking, smoking and drug use show dramatic rise among children

Terri Judd

The Independent

Thursday 31 Jan 2002

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Drinking among young teenage boys has risen almost threefold in the past 10
years, with more than 50 per cent indulging regularly by the age of 15, a
study reveals today.

The Social Trends report, by the Office of National Statistics, paints a
gloomy picture. Not only are youngsters drinking, smoking and taking drugs
more, but an increasing number are obese, with many failing to meet
government guidelines on eating and exercise.

Boys aged 11 to 13 are now consuming the equivalent of four pints of beer
or more a week (8.4 units of alcohol), compared with about 3 units in the
early 1990s. Overall, children are drinking twice as much as they did a
decade ago.

While the number of schoolchildren who have at least one alcoholic drink a
week has risen from one-fifth in 1990 to a quarter by 2000, there has been
a far more marked increase in the amount they consume every seven days.
"Young people have a lot more money than they had previously, so a lot more
to spend on drink," said a spokeswoman for Alcohol Concern. "Alcohol is
directed at young people now with the rise in alcopops, which are brightly
coloured, don't taste of alcohol and are easily consumed."

Boys aged 11 to 15 now drink 11.7 units a week, while 15-year-olds consume
14.5 units, more than the recommended limit for adult women and two-thirds
the limit for a grown man.

Alcohol Concern said: "The effect on a teenager is different as they are
still growing so no one knows the long-term effects of drinking to excess."

While acknowledging that drinking was a "rite of passage" many children
would grow out of, the charity warned it could lead to uncharacteristically
dangerous behaviour such as crime or unsafe sex.

"If a young person drinks for the first time in a supervised home
environment and is taught to drink sensibly, that is the best start. It is
when they are unsupervised in gangs in parks that there are problems," the
spokeswoman added.

Girls showed an equally marked growth in alcohol consumption, from 4.7
units to 9.1 a week - the equivalent of nine glasses of wine - since 1990.

Drug use is also on the increase with the number of schoolchildren who had
used illegal drugs - predominantly cannabis - jumping from 11 to 14 per
cent between 1998 and 2000. More than 60 per cent of 15-year-olds said they
had been offered drugs.

While the number of pupils who smoked increased from 1999 to 2000, the
level of smoking has varied little in the past decade and the report said
there was not yet enough evidence to identify an upward trend. Almost a
quarter of 15-year-olds smoke regularly.

The Social Trends report also revealed that working- class children are
three times more likely to develop mental illness than the offspring of
professional parents. One in 10 children and adolescents had a mental
disorder in 1999. While the figure for the sons and daughters of managerial
workers was just 5 per cent, it was 14 per cent among the children of
unskilled manual workers.

Carol Summerfield, one of the study editors, said Britain was in many ways
a better place in the early 21st century with a falling trend in pollution
and smoking, as well as greater education and job opportunities,
particularly for women. "But there remains a significant minority who are
getting left behind, such as lone-parent families and those without
qualifications," she added.

One of the more obvious manifestations of decreasing but still evident
class division was the difference in mental health, the report said. Dr
Anula Nikapota, a child psychiatrist, said she would be wary of
generalising about mental health among children but admitted many of the
risk factors associated with psychiatric illness could be more prevalent
among poorer families. "There may be psychiatric illness or substance abuse
among parents, which leads to unemployment," she said. "You can see the
same factors in people of a high social class but they can be more
prevalent among those with socio- economic difficulties.

Children of lone parents had double the chance of developing psychiatric
problems than those from couple families - 16 per cent compared with 8.

"In all areas of children's lives inequalities exist," the report said.
"Disadvantaged children experience more mental health problems [and] more
self-harm. It will be some years before it is possible to measure the
impact of initiatives aimed at reducing these inequalities."

 

 

 

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