Peer Pressure Drives College Drinking Huntington Station NY

When college students think that other undergrads drink a lot of alcohol, they drink more themselves. Nowadays, consumptions of alcohol in college students are getting highter and higher. Keep on reading to know the details.

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Peer Pressure Drives College Drinking

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By Rick Nauert PhD Senior News Editor
Reviewed by John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on July 10, 2009

Peer Pressure Drives College Drinking When college students think that other undergrads drink a lot of alcohol, they drink more themselves.

However, a new systematic review suggests that when college students learn they are mistaken about the actual normal drinking habits of their peers, they sometimes imbibe less often.

The reviewers evaluated 22 studies that involved 7,275 university and college students. All studies but one took place in the United States.

The review appears in the current issue of The Cochrane Library, a publication of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization that evaluates research in all aspects of health care.

Systematic reviews draw evidence-based conclusions about medical practice after considering both the content and quality of existing trials on a topic.

In the European Union, where the review authors are based, alcohol is a serious problem. “In the UK, young people are drinking earlier and heavier than ever before,” said co-author David Foxcroft of Oxford Brookes University, in England.

“Levels of alcohol consumption amongst 11- to 13 year-olds have almost doubled in the last 10 years or so.”

Not too surprisingly, the reviewers reported that university students have a tendency to drink excessively. They looked at how social norms — our beliefs about what is “normal” behavior in the people close to us — might influence students’ drinking.

If a student believes that his or her peers drink heavily, it will likely influence the amount of alcohol the student personally drinks, the Cochrane reviewers say.

However, they say that much of peer influence is the result of incorrect perceptions.

Researchers in the 22 studies placed students into either intervention or control groups. Those in the intervention groups received personalized feedback about actual college students’ normal drinking habits, their own personal drinking profiles — quantity of alcohol consumed, calorie intake and money spent on alcohol — as well as the health risk factors involved in heavy drinking.

The interventions occurred in different ways: alone, either by mail or via the Web; or together with individual face-to-face or group counseling.

Interventions that occurred electronically reduced the students’ alcohol-related problems, drinking frequency, peak blood-alcohol content and drinking quantity.

For example, in three studies using Web feedback, 62 percent of the students reported a reduction in alcohol-related problems and a reduction of 1.2 points in the Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index, a 23-item questionnaire geared to adolescents, the reviewers found.

In addition, with Web feedback, 65 percent of the students reported that they were drinking less frequently. Most results were from three-month follow-ups.

Individual face-to-face feedback also led to students drinking less often, with two studies (217 participants) showing that 63 pe...

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