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Binge Drinking
- In 2000, almost one in five underage persons aged 12 to
20 was a binge drinker, drinking five or more drinks on the same occasion on at
least one day in the past 30 days
- The rate of binge drinking among underage persons
was almost as high as among adults aged 21 or older
- Underage persons who reported binge drinking were 7 times
more likely to report using illicit drugs during the past month than underage
persons who did not binge drink
The 2000 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse (NHSDA)
questioned more than 70,000 persons aged 12 or older nationwide, including
almost 35,000 persons aged 12 to 20, regarding their frequency and quantity of
drinking or use of any illicit drug during the month before the survey.
Binge drinking was defined as drinking five or more drinks on the
same occasion on at least 1 day in the past 30 days. By "occasion" is meant at
the same time or within a couple of hours of each other. "Any illicit drug"
refers to use at least once of marijuana/hashish, cocaine (including crack),
inhalants, hallucinogens (including PCP and LSD), heroin, or any
prescription-type psychotherapeutic used nonmedically during the 30 days before
the survey.1 Respondents aged 18 to 22 were also asked about their college
enrollment status.
Binge Drinking Among Underage Persons Compared with
Those Aged 21 or Older
According to the 2000 NHSDA, an estimated 46
million persons aged 12 or older were binge drinkers. Of these, almost 7
million were younger than 21, the legal drinking age. The proportion of
underage persons aged 12 to 20 who were binge drinkers (19 percent) was similar
to that among adults aged 21 or older (21 percent) for whom alcohol use is
legal. The percentage of underage persons who binged on alcohol increased with
age, from 1 percent of 12 year olds to 39 percent of 20 year olds. Youths aged
12 to 16 had lower rates of binge drinking than the total population aged 12 or
older, but persons aged 17 to 20 were more likely to report binge drinking
during the past 30 days than the total population aged 12 or older.
The
difference between males and females was less among those aged 20 or younger
(21 percent males vs. 16 percent females) than among those aged 21 or older (30
percent males vs. 13 percent females)
Underage females were more likely
to report binge drinking (16 percent) than were females aged 21 or older (13
percent). Among underage persons, fewer Asians and blacks reported binge
drinking than Hispanics, American Indians/Alaska Natives, or
whites.
Binge Drinking and Illicit Drug Use Among Minors
In 2000, underage persons who reported binge drinking (43 percent) were
more likely to report past month use of any illicit drug than were their peers
who did not binge drink (6 percent) (Table 1). Underage persons who reported
binge drinking were almost 9 times more likely to have used marijuana/hashish
during the past month and were more than 6 times more likely to have used any
illicit drug other than marijuana during the past month compared with underage
persons who did not binge drink. Underage binge drinkers were 11 times
more likely to have used hallucinogens during the past month and 6 times more
likely to have used psychotherapeutic drugs nonmedically during the past month
than underage persons who did not binge drink.
Binge Drinking on
Campus
|
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Among young adults aged 18 to 22, the rate of binge
drinking was higher among full-time college students (41 percent) than among
those who were not enrolled full-time as college students (36 percent). The
rate of binge drinking increased with age among 18 to 21 year olds but was
lower among 22 year olds regardless of college enrollment status. Differences
in binge drinking rates by college enrollment status were greater for 19 and 20
year olds than others in this age group. The highest rates of binge drinking
among full-time college students and other persons were among 21 year
olds.
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