Survey illustrates what Partners in Prevention is up against

By SHELLY BIRKELO ( Contact )   Monday, March 22, 2010
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— Of 147 people who completed a Partners in Prevention-Rock County online survey on adult perceptions of underage drinking, many thought the drinking age should be lowered to 18.

Some also thought it's the parent's right to allow underage drinking.

Regardless of previous and ongoing efforts to reduce youth substance abuse in county communities, the survey revealed the local coalition has work to do, said Kathy Comeau, PIP project coordinator.

"We (still) need to do some educating of the public about alcohol," she said.

Comeau drew that conclusion after Partners in Prevention analyzed its latest community survey about underage drinking in Edgerton and Beloit.

Many commenters supported lowering the drinking age to 18. They argued that if a person can work at 14 and vote and join the military at 18, he or she should be allowed to drink, she said.

Asked if they agreed or disagreed with a statement that it's OK for 18- to 20- year-olds to drink alcohol, 47 percent of people surveyed from Edgerton disagreed while 70.6 percent of people from Beloit disagreed, Comeau said.

Comments that drinking responsibly would not affect a youth's ability to learn indicates that many people do not realize the brain is still developing well into the mid-20s, she said.

"Although almost all people surveyed acknowledged that alcohol can affect youth's ability to make decisions, only 76.6 percent of those surveyed from Edgerton agreed that alcohol could have a life-long impact on a youth's developing brain, while 84.3 percent of those surveyed from Beloit agreed," she said.

"We need to continue to get the word out about how alcohol affects development of the brain and that it can have some pretty severe consequences," Comeau said.

Survey respondents also thought that whether to report underage drinking to law enforcement depended on whether the drinkers were under 16 and whether parents were involved.

"So if parents were present, they were less likely to report," she said.

The survey also showed that people were more likely to report parties that were loud than parties that were supervised. It also revealed that many people considered hard liquor to be different than other types of alcohol, Comeau said.

"So having a beer is OK vs. hard liquor, even though the alcohol content may be the same," she said.

Partners mailed 2,000 postcards to both communities in January. Only 153 adults—mostly aged 40 to 59—started the survey. Of those, 69 were from Edgerton and 84 from Beloit. Seventy-nine were parents. Ninety-eight were female, and 55 were male, Comeau said.

"We were pleased by the types of groups responding, just not the number of responses received," she said.

With only a 7 percent response rate, Comeau said the group couldn't generalize how people think in Edgerton or Beloit.

"But we can say that out of the 147 completed surveys, this is what people thought," Comeau said.

Partners will repeat the survey in spring 2011 to see if perceptions change and to try to increase the number of responses, Comeau said.

Meanwhile, Partners in Prevention is working with CrimeStoppers in Janesville, Beloit and Edgerton to promote its text, type and talk software campaign known as safe reporting. It also will promote its "Parents Who Host; Lose the Most" campaign around prom and this summer. It will focus on locking up liquor.

"We're going to raise awareness," she said, "that you know where your liquor is, how much you have and not to make it accessible to young people."

reader COMMENTS
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(4)
thekid3477
Mar 23, 2010 at 5:27 p.m.
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if you are an adult at 18 that should be it. none of the 'ok you are an adult...but...'

im all for parents teaching them how to drink responsibly...i believe there would be less desire to drink the forbidden fruit to the point of extreme intoxication. 'this drugs ok at a certain age...but this one you have to wait to another age...and this ones not legal at all...'

seriously...what kind of message is that sending to our youth??

inconvenienttruth
Mar 23, 2010 at 5:03 p.m.
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Be afraid of what alcohol can do to an 18-20 year old's brain...because alcohol can do no harm to the brain from age 21 onward!
.
Maybe if a high school graduate/college student (aka A LEGAL ADULT) could drink openly and legally, they wouldn't secret themselves away in hidden groups where the feelings of risk and taboo fuel their drinking and where their safety is left solely in their hands for fear of repercussions if they're found out.

MakeItBetter
Mar 23, 2010 at 9:47 a.m.
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Kathy Comeau, PIP project coordinator, says
"We (still) need to do some educating of the public about alcohol.

She's the one who should be listening to the public and getting an education, as she clearly doesn't understand the reality of the situation.

People who drink know that hard liquor is much more likely to get them into trouble than drinking beer or wine. With beer or wine, you have more time to feel the effects and you feel full. With hard liquor, it's real easy to get over the line before you know what hit you. Lot's of people know this for a fact from experience.

Drinking responsibly is something that's learned over time, usually with some vomiting involved. Do you really expect someone to not drink a drop, then start experimenting when they turn 21? That's how "good" college kids end up dead in their dorm rooms from alcohol poisoning. Parents are right to want to be around when their kids are going through this critical learning phase.

Kathy has no credibility trying to "educate" the public on issues she doesn't seem to really understand. Perhaps the PIP project participants should study how young people are introduced to alcohol in some other countries where binge drinking and drunk driving are less of a problem.

biggirl
Mar 23, 2010 at 9:24 a.m.
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"Raise awareness" and "educate" here mean only control.

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