Calgary Herald

Binge drinking starts early, study finds

- TOM SPEARS

Those who binge early binge more, says a 15-year Montreal study that concludes it’s a bad idea to let teenagers get drunk at Christmas or New Year’s.

When teens start getting drunk at an earlier age, they’re most likely to keep up that drinking style into their 20s, says researcher Erin O’Loughlin of Concordia University.

“This is a look at which type of individual sustains binge drinking,” she said. “Just as a parent would never give their child a cigarette to try, the same view should perhaps apply to alcohol. Delaying that first taste of alcohol might be the best thing you can do — even if it’s New Year’s Eve.”

The study (which covers topics from smoking to exercise to drinking) began in 1999 with students as young as 12 and 13 and tracked them down again when they were 20, and again at 25.

The concept of binge drinking is still foggy for many people, O’Loughlin said.

“People will know when they’re drunk, for sure. But they don’t always

Just as a parent would never give their child a cigarette to try, the same view should perhaps apply to alcohol.

know that when they have four drinks, for women, that’s considered binge drinking.” (Five drinks at one sitting is officially a binge for men.)

“Our study showed that if you started drinking alcohol earlier ... and drank more frequently when you were younger, these habits transition­ed into young adulthood.

“There might be this idea that kids experiment in adolescenc­e and their drinking declines as they grow older,” she said.

“Our study showed that isn’t necessaril­y true. It showed 85 per cent of people who are binge drinking at age 20 are still binge drinking at age 25.”

The principal investigat­or in the work is Erin’s mother, Jennifer O’Loughlin, who teaches epidemiolo­gy at the Universite de Montreal.

The study is published in a medical journal called Alcoholism: Clinical and Experiment­al Research.

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