Teens and Alcohol

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Teens and Alcohol

Everyday teenagers are faced with many decisions. One of the most important of these is whether or not to join in with the trend of teenage drinking. The decision teenagers make can be crucial to their future well being and success in life. Teenage drinking has many causes, namely peer pressure, the attitudes of society, parental influence, and addiction. Changes need to be made in each of these areas for teenagers to be protected from alcohol related problems.

Peer pressure strongly influences teenagers to drink. During the teenage years it is generally very important for teenagers to feel they are one of the group and that they fit in and are not different. Teenagers who feel unpopular sometimes drink alcohol to fit in, even though they may not choose to do so otherwise. One example of this is binge drinking in college fraternities and sororities.

When teenagers leave the safety of home and enter college life, they can feel very out of place. In order for them to feel that they belong when joining a fraternity or sorority, they can be pressured into binge drinking and other types of behavior that they wouldn't normally do. By doing what the fraternity brothers or sorority sisters ask them to do, they think that they are proving themselves to be worthy of a place in the organization. This can be very dangerous for many reasons. "Results from a recent Harvard School of Public Health College Alcohol Study provide the first national picture in almost fifty years of just how widespread and harmful heavy episodic or "binge" drinking has become, not only for those students who abuse alcohol, but also for others in their immediate environment" (Wechsler, 178). Binge drinkers put themselves at high r...

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...use. As with most mental illness, a combination of medical treatment and psychological counseling is usually most effective. Medical treatments may alter the body's reaction to a substance, reduce cravings, or change a substance's effect (3). "Because substance abuse is likely to coexist with another mental disorder, particularly depression or anxiety, psychoactive medications are often prescribed" (3). Although drugs may help people break away from a substance, psychotherapy or supportive counseling is usually essential in minimizing relapses (3).

In conclusion, teenage drinking is a serious problem that not only effects the teen, but those around them. But, it is not so large a problem that with a combined effort of community leaders, parents, and other teens, solutions can be found and effectively put into practice. Where there is a will, there is a way.

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