TEENAGE DRINKING | STREET LIFE | underage binge drinking is causing serious
damage |
Inside Out investigates the stark reality of underage
drinking and discovers that in some cases, alcohol causes more problems
amongst teenagers than any illegal drug. Ecstasy,
cocaine, heroin, the list of harmful substances abused by youngsters today
goes on. But it may surprise you to learn that research undertaken in
Essex has revealed that the substance causing the greatest problem is
alcohol. Starting
early | Tom Aldridge's
report reveals that young people are drinking at very early ages |
"Alcohol
is the drug that causes most problems鈥ur concern is that these young
people are starting to drink at really early ages. We found one regular
drinker who was seven." Tom Aldridge author of the report The service
that has been created is especially tailored for kids across Essex. The
Chelmsford-based project, backed by the Children鈥檚 Society, is exclusively
designed for children, some not even in their teens. The drop
in centre opens every weekday, allowing young people to talk about their
problems in confidence. It is this confidentiality that has sparked controversy.
Parents are not informed about their child鈥檚 drinking unless the child
requests it, or unless the child is considered to be at risk. Convicted
under the influence Kerri began
drinking at the age of 12. When Kerri鈥檚 dad would have a pint, she would
join him with an alcopop. After the death of her dad, Kerri began relying
more heavily on alcohol. As she was living with a friend rather than her
mum, there was no one to check her behaviour. "I was doing
two to three bottles of Jack Daniels a day...When I woke up one morning
and I had no drink in and I had the shakes... that鈥檚 when I realised it
was really bad," says Kerri. | Kerri
began drinking at the age of twelve |
Fuelled by
drink, Kerri ended up in trouble. At the age of 16, she was convicted
for non-violent crime and has just completed an 18 month sentence in Holloway. Kerri has
been in counselling with Sally for seven years and although she still
drinks occasionally, she is getting back on her feet. Kerri puts the success
of the service down to the fact that young people are listened to, rather
than preached at. "When I
first started talking to people; counsellors, psychiatrists, I didn鈥檛
like them, they pry too much... but Sally is really nice and down to earth,"
says Kerri. Communicating
with youngstersThe service
is not only office-based. In the evenings, workers visit the areas where
kids are known to hang out drinking. The ability to communicate with the
kids is essential, so the workers are chosen for their ability with young
people, rather than their qualifications. | Drinking
is part of Britain's social culture |
Martin is
one such outreach worker. He took Inside Out to Central Park in Chelmsford,
one of the known hang outs for underage drinkers.
"This is
an area we target. We give them information and talk to them before they
get too drunk," says Martin. One drinker
admits to drinking ethanol cut with coke, as a means of getting drunk
really quickly. This provides a sobering thought to parents everywhere. "People
may think their kids aren鈥檛 like me, but how do they know?"
An underage drinker No simple
solutionAlthough
the cases of alcohol abuse we have looked at are extreme, they are by
no-means isolated incidents. Alcohol abuse amongst youngsters is on the
increase and in a society where drinking is part and parcel of our social
culture, it is a problem with no easy solution. Whilst the
outreach scheme in Essex doesn鈥檛 claim to have all the answers to our
nation鈥檚 less than healthy relationship with alcohol, it offers support
and a confident to youngsters, and it鈥檚 certainly a step in the right
direction. |