Study Links TV, Music to Teen Drinking
CHICAGO – High school students who watch lots of
television and music videos are more likely to start drinking than other
youngsters, researchers say. The Stanford University study of 1,533
ninth-graders also showed that youngsters who rented movies were less likely
to start drinking, while playing video and computer games had no effect.
Watching TV and videos made no difference in the drinking habits of those who
already drank. The findings are not surprising given research that shows
alcohol is the most common beverage shown on television, the study’s lead
author, Dr. Thomas Robinson, said Monday.
”The great majority of drinking on television is by the most attractive and
most influential people, and it is often associated with sexually suggestive
content,” said Robinson, who works at the school’s Center for Research and
Disease Prevention.
The study found that each increase of one hour per day of watching music
videos brought a 31% greater risk of starting to drink over the next 18
months. Each hour increase of watching other kinds of television corresponded
to a 9% greater risk. Each hour spent watching movies in a VCR corresponded to
an 11% decreased risk of starting to drink alcohol. Computer and video games
had no effect either way.
The study, reported in this month’s edition of the journal Pediatrics, looked
at 2,609 ninth-graders in San Jose, Calif., and followed 1,533 of them
throughout the 18 months. They reported their activities – how many hours
playing video games, for example – and were asked how many drinks of alcohol
they had ever had, and how many they had in the
previous month. Over the next 18 months, 36.2% of 898 nondrinkers began to
drink.
Television habits had no effect on the 635 students who already drank, the
authors said. But of the students who did not drink at the start of the study,
what they watched on television played a major role in what they did over the
next 18 months, the study found.
Robinson said there needs to be ”balance in the way alcohol is portrayed so
that people who did drink did suffer some consequences from it.”
Alyse Booth, spokeswoman for the National Center on Addiction and Substance
Abuse at Columbia University in New York, said the results of the study did
not surprise her. ”There is a tremendous glamorization of the use of
alcohol,” she said. ”Alcohol use is portrayed as normal and glamorous, never
with the consequences.”
– Associated Press
