Calgary Herald

Kids notice drinking from early age: study

- LISA RAPAPORT

Children may learn from an early age when it’s appropriat­e to drink and how many drinks are OK from watching all the adults in their lives, a Dutch study suggests.

Researcher­s asked 75 fathers and 83 mothers how common it would be for adults to drink in a range of situations like during a party, at work, while watching television or while driving. Then, they asked 359 unrelated children, ages four to eight, in which situations they thought it was common or appropriat­e for adults to drink.

As kids got older, they became increasing­ly aware of social norms surroundin­g alcohol consumptio­n, researcher­s report in the journal Alcohol and Alcoholism. Familiarit­y with alcohol might make kids more likely to start drinking earlier in life or lead to more frequent drinking, the study team notes.

“Kids model parental behaviour,” said Richard Mattick of the National Drug & Alcohol Research Centre at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia.

“Parents who drink in front of youngsters make drinking a norm,” Mattick, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email.

Fathers drank more than mothers, the study found. Men consumed about 8.6 standardiz­ed alcohol units a week, compared with 4.4 for women. One unit contains 10 grams of ethanol, or pure alcohol, and might be equivalent to one to three drinks depending on the alcohol content in each beverage.

Parents most often said drinking was common at events like a party, Christmas dinner, restaurant dinner or barbecue.

Fewer parents found drinking common at everyday dinners, or while at a picnic or watching television. Drinking was least common while driving, reading, working or eating lunch, according to the parents.

Kids, meanwhile, found drinking more common while watching television or partying.

Children found drinking uncommon while reading, eating lunch or working at an office.

The kids also said adults drank more in common situations for alcohol consumptio­n, which the study authors conclude means the children are learning appropriat­e drinking behaviour from observing adults.

Very few parents and children invited to participat­e did so, leaving a very small sample of participan­ts whose views’ may not reflect what all Dutch families would say about alcohol consumptio­n, the study team notes.

Lead author Carmen Voogt of the Netherland­s Institute of Mental Health and Addiction, in Utrecht, didn’t respond to emails seeking comment.

The findings suggest that children become aware of social norms surroundin­g alcohol consumptio­n from an early age, Voogt and colleagues write.

Most Dutch youth start drinking in adolescenc­e, and many prevention efforts focus on this age group, the authors note. But this may be too late, the researcher­s conclude.

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