Froma Harrop presented her viewpoint on binge drinking and college students in an essay, which appeared in the Tampa Tribune. Harrop, an editorial writer and columnist for the Providential Journal, contends that understudies ought to be the ones accountable for their conduct, not organizations and educational institutions.…
Claim: Today’s college students, both of the age and under, have been abusing alcohol to the point of hospitalization and it needs to be stopped and put under enforcement. The author’s point of view is first person.…
Wechsler is the director of the College Alcohol Studies Program at the Harvard School of Public Health. Approaching binge drinking problem on many college campuses, he argues that it must be forbidden. This is due to tragic outcomes such as alcohol poisoning or death resulted from it according to a survey conducted at 140 colleges and universities. One specific example he quotes is the death of Scott Krueger, a first-year student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology due to alcohol poisoning resulted from overindulgent drinking. Then, he examines the causes of the problem. Although it is partly due to the students themselves, he claims that the main causes come from college authorities in the sense that they do not take proper action to stop the problem. This is because they are oblivious to it; they do not take responsibility when it occurs off campus; they do not enforce the policy effectively. Therefore, he suggests a need for greater coordination and prompt action among college presidents, administrators, students, local authorities and…
Drinking on college campuses has become a huge problem. For example, in the 10th century only old people used to drink, but now students drink more than their parents. Students see their parents drinking, so they may think that drinking has no effect on health that anyone can drink so why can’t the students drink? Therefore, college students have been drinking alcohol since the 14th century. Barrett Seaman’s article “How Bingeing Became the New College Sport,” appearing in TIME magazine on August 29, 2005, explains how binge drinking is affecting college students. It also suggests that lowering the drinking age might help solve the problem of binge drinking. This article has much information on how and where students get drunk.…
Substance use continues to be a major public health concern, not only for communities across the nation, but also for higher education institutions and administrators. The harmful consequences associated with alcohol and other drug (AOD) use and the negative effects on students, families, campuses, and surrounding communities have been well documented in the substance use field.…
Alcohol use among college students has reached a crisis point. Alcohol consumption leads to signifigant alcohol related problems such as binge drinking, alcoholism, drinking and driving,…
Binge drinking on college campuses affects more than just those that are doing it-teachers, parents and the quality of campus life all suffer when the problem gets out of hand. Putting an end to binge drinking is not easy but it is possible with the right initiatives.…
Objective.—To examine the extent of binge drinking by college students and the ensuing health and behavioral problems that binge drinkers create for themselves and others on their campus. Design.—Self-administered survey mailed to a national representative sample of US 4-year college students. Setting.—One hundred forty US 4-year colleges in 1993. Participants.—A total of 17,592 college students. Main Outcome Measures.—Self-reports of drinking behavior, alcohol-related health problems, and other problems. Results.—Almost half (44%) of college students responding to the survey were binge drinkers, including almost one fifth (19%) of the students who were frequent binge drinkers. Frequent binge drinkers are more likely to experience serious health and other consequences of their drinking behavior than other students. Almost half (47%) of the frequent binge drinkers experienced five or more different drinkingrelated problems, including injuries and engaging in unplanned sex, since the beginning of the school year. Most binge drinkers do not consider themselves to be problem drinkers and have not sought treatment for an alcohol problem. Binge drinkers create problems for classmates who are not binge drinkers. Students who are not binge drinkers at schools with higher binge rates were more likely than students at schools with lower binge rates to experience problems such as being pushed, hit, or assaulted or experiencing an unwanted sexual advance. Conclusions.—Binge drinking is widespread on college campuses. Programs aimed at reducing this problem should focus on frequent binge drinkers, refer them…
Society and media has always made an impression that alcohol is an essential ingredient in social gatherings. Television, radio, magazine, social media, and so forth are major advertisers for ads pertaining to alcohol, since liquor companies pay major amount of money to advertise in these media outlets. These media ads are seen everywhere from sports, to nightclubs, to billboards, more than million liquor commercials and ads appear in all of media outlets. I believe, majority of people from ages 21-35 are more known to drink alcohol on frequent basis than others, whether it's at home, or place of social gatherings. Many college students receive bad grades if they have a bad habit of drinking alcohol, it causes them not to focus or concentrate in their studies, or…
The environment and the transition of high school students to independent college students can be an overwhelming power for incoming freshmen in college. “Upon college entry, students gain independence from their family and relative freedom from obligations and commitments to others.” Many of the incoming students tend to feel more independent and free to do things by themselves without help or consent. These students then try their best to fit in with the crowd, it’s human nature to want to feel accepted in any way. Unfortunately many of the students get the wrong kind of attention. This is where drinking becomes an issue. “These drinking patterns are affected by environment and temporal characteristics specific to the college environment.” The environment can be an important part in students lives, it can start their drinking…
Drinking occurs frequently within the college environment. It was reported that 87.3% of college students under the legal minimum drinking age had tried alcohol, when 50% reported heavily drinking in the past year (Clapp, 275). Heavy drinking can cause many consequences, from mild ones as hangovers to severe problems such as suicide attempts and death. Although mild problems like hangovers are most common, “the heavy use of alcohol among college students has been estimated to result in approximately 1,400 deaths and another 500,000 alcohol-related traumas each year”(Clapp, 275). Research done by Miron and Tetelbaum, shows that the minimum legal drinking age has only a minor effect on teen drinking. College students under the age of 21 are drinking in uncontrolled environments, they are left to learn for themselves how to drink at a moderate and safe rate. This learning process cannot be approached in these unsupervised environments, where young adults play drinking games and form ruinous drinking habits. The environment witch you are drinking in can relate to how and how much alcohol you…
Each year there are around 1,825 alcohol related deaths in college age students. Also there have been over 696,000 students assaulted by a student who had be drinking alcohol. And around 97,000 students have reported being sexually assaulted by someone with alcohol in there system (“College Binge Drinking”). Binge drinking is a pattern of drinking brings blood alcohol concentration levels to .08. This typically occurs after 4 drinks for women and 5 drinks in men. Many students entering college see this as a normal behavior once they get into college. Also many students will have a lot more stress and peer pressure that will introduce them to drinking behaviors. Binge drinking in college can lead to academic problems, effects on oneself and others and physical and sexual assault on others while…
According to National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, more than 1,800 college students die from alcohol-related causes every year while about 800,000 are being assaulted by other students, be it sexually or other assaults. About one in every four college students also accept that they have experienced academic problems. Despite the fact that college drinking has caused many issues, it has not been stopped, yet. College drinking is not only harmful for students who consume alcohol but also for other people who live around the campus. It has a bad influence on the social lives of the general population.…
Second of all, attempts to stop the drinking behavior for the young people on college campus have not been success. Instead, college students do some of the most dangerous drinking. B.G. Fitzpatrick and fellow research team documents how much they are drinking these days on campus, and concludes “Heavy episodic drinking (HED) is generally conducted in private, among peers, and college students engage in the behavior in much higher proportions than do other young adults” (par. 1). Elisabeth Muhlenfeld, herself a college president, talks about how sad consequences of this behavior. She…
The number of drinkers has been on the increase over the past two decades and continues to rise. Consumption of alcohol is common among the underage population with at least 30% of underage drinkers engaging in risky behavior during and after drinking. This behavior reaches its peak between ages 18/19-24 in what can be attributed to the abuse of drinking when a person reaches the legal drinking age and doesn’t have to be accountable to anymore but self. These risky drinking habits reduce from the age of 25 years onwards because of the level of responsibility and maturity that comes with this age. Additionally, young people in this age group tend to drink more than five bottles of alcohol in one sitting during events like parties and when adults are absent. Peer pressure and the need for a person to feel “cool” pushes this group into risky behaviors that predisposes them to a number of harms. Risks include alcohol poisoning, injury, violence, and unprotected sex among others. If, at this age, they prolong drinking, long term risks like cancer, liver, and heart diseases become realities later on in life. Though preventable, alcohol related trauma causes significant number of deaths among the…