Also Included In: Women's Health / Gynecology
Article Date: 11 Dec 2011 - 0:00 PST
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Many young women who steer clear of alcohol while they're in high school may change their ways once they go off to college. And those who take up binge drinking may be at relatively high risk of sexual assault, according to a University at Buffalo-led study in the January issue of the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs.
The college years are famously associated with drinking. But little has been known about how young women change their high school drinking habits once they start college.
So for the new study, the research team followed 437 young women from high school graduation through freshman year of college. They found that of women who had never drank heavily in high school (if at all), nearly half admitted to heavy episodic drinking -- commonly called binge drinking -- at least once by the end of their first college semester. Young women who were already engaging in binge drinking in high school continued drinking at similar levels in college.
What's more, binge drinking was linked to students' risk of sexual victimization -- regardless of what their drinking habits had been in high school.
Of all young women whose biggest binge had included four to six drinks, one quarter said they'd been sexually victimized in the fall semester. That included anything from unwanted sexual contact to rape.
And the more alcohol those binges involved, the greater the likelihood of sexual assault. Of women who'd ever consumed 10 or more drinks in a sitting since starting college, 59 percent were sexually victimized by the end of their first semester. Though young women are not to blame for being victimized -- that fault lies squarely with the perpetrator -- if colleges can make more headway in reducing heavy drinking, they may be able to prevent more sexual assaults in the process.
"This suggests that drinking-prevention efforts should begin before college," said lead researcher Maria Testa, a senior scientist at UB's Research Institute on Addictions.
The study also underscores the fact that even kids who don't drink in high school are at risk of heavy drinking once they head off to college, Testa said.
For parents, the bottom line is to talk with your kids about drinking before they go to college -- whatever you think their drinking habits have been in high school, according to Testa. And after they've left for college, keep talking. "Parents still do have an impact on their kids after they go to college," Testa said. "Parenting is not over."
Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.Visit our alcohol / addiction / illegal drugs section for the latest news on this subject. Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:
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25 Dec. 2011.
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posted by Michelle Petersen on 11 Dec 2011 at 1:27 am
So in effect if a female is binge drinking she is more likely to be sexually assaulted by those waiting to take advantage of the situation. How unbelievably irresponsible for such a forward thinking medical site. As scientist and journalists we should be asking why there are gentlemen who only show their true colours when they feel the subject is vunerable, less likely to remember and less likely to fight back. Shouldn't this article be placing the onus on those that carry out these attacks rather than those on the recieving end. Linking binge drinking with sexual assault is a short term fix. If you want to write about the dangers of binge-drinking why not follow these young binge-drinkers into alcoholism in later life or study the loss of grey matter and brain cells or the addictive personality. Or we could concentrate on the perpetrators and ask why they do this in the first place?, are they just sexually assaulting women or both sexes in a dominance play? Why do they wait until someone is vunerable? Do they feel sexual assault is acceptable and if so why? So many different angles with this article and you choose the most offensive one.....
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posted by Randi on 15 Dec 2011 at 10:32 pm
I learned this over twenty years ago before I was a freshman in college. Duh... The question I want answered is how many of these freshman were sexually assaulted/molested BEFORE they graduated from high school. I heard the number was 1 out of 5 females and 1 out of 15 males before age 18. Sounds right to me. Does this trauma contribute to their binge drinking?
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