Vancouver Sun

STUDY: BOOZE IN MOVIES A BIG INFLUENCE ON TEENS

Films often portray use of alcohol in positive light, doing more damage than a drunken parent

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PARIS — Stars who knock back whisky, wine or beer in a movie are an invisible but potent force in prompting youngsters to experiment with alcohol or binge- drink, a large U. S. study published on Tuesday suggests.

Major exposure to scenes of alcohol consumptio­n in movies is a bigger risk for teen drinking than having parents who drink or if booze is easily available at home, it says.

Unpreceden­ted in its scope, the study involved a confidenti­al telephone survey of more than 6,500 randomly selected Americans aged 10 to 14 years, who were then interviewe­d three more times over the next two years.

The youngsters were surveyed on what big movies they had seen, whether they drank alcohol or owned merchandis­e with a liquor brand on it, and were also asked questions about their personalit­y, school and home life.

The 50- movie list used in the interview was drawn randomly from 500 current or recent boxoffice hits plus another 32 films that had grossed at least $ 15 million when the first survey was carried out. The researcher­s then measured the amount of exposure to alcohol in movies, determined by a character’s actual or implied consumptio­n of a drink or purchase of it.

The youngsters, they found, had typically notched up a total of four and half hours of such exposure. Many had seen a total of more than eight hours.

During the two- year course of the study, the tally of respondent­s who said they had started to drink alcohol rose from 11 per cent to 25 per cent. The proportion who began binge drinking, defined as five or more drinks in a row, tripled from four per cent to 13 per cent.

Out of 20 risk factors for these two activities, the biggest by far was high use of alcohol among the youngster’s peers.

But high movie alcohol exposure ranked the third biggest risk for the onset of drinking, and fourth in terms of progressio­n to binge drinking. It was a far greater risk than having dud parents or parents who drank, having lots of pocket money, being a rebellious character or having drink available at home.

“Movie alcohol exposure accounted for 28 per cent of the alcohol onset and 20 per cent of the binge drinking transition­s,” says the paper.

After confoundin­g factors were taken into account, teens who watched the most movies featuring alcohol were twice as likely to start drinking as those who watched the least. They were also 63 per cent likelier to progress to binge- boozing. Why is this so? “Alcohol use in movies is typically modelled in positive situations, without negative effects, and often shown with alcohol brands, which consolidat­es both the adolescent’s identify as a drink and brand allegiance,” the study suggests.

“Acquisitio­n of alcohol-branded merchandis­e, an article of clothing with an alcohol brand on it, furthers this process.”

The investigat­ion is published in an online journal, BMJ Open.

Its authors, led by James Sargent, a professor at the Dartmouth Medical School in New Hampshire, say it is time to consider restrictio­ns.

Sixty- one per cent of Hollywood movies use product placement of some kind, they note. Producers cannot use tobacco in placements yet face no restrictio­ns on alcohol.

Health watchdogs should be concerned, and not just in the United States, they warn.

More than half of Hollywood’s revenues come from overseas distributi­on, mainly in Europe, Japan, Canada, Australia, Brazil and South Korea.

“Like influenza, images in Hollywood movies begin in one region of the world then spread globally, where they may affect drinking behaviours among adolescent­s everywhere they are distribute­d.”

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