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Forty-five hundred teenagers die each year in the United States from excessive alcohol consumption. There is a correlation between the amount of exposure to alcohol advertising and underage drinking. Parents should assume their teens are exposed to alcohol ads, both print and television, and should make it a point to remind them about the dangers of drinking.
Date Released: 8/31/2007 Running time: 6:30 Author: MMWR Series Name: A Cup of Health with CDC
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A CUP OF HEALTH WITH CDC
Alcohol Ads Sway Teens?
Youth Exposure to Alcohol Advertising in Magazines –
United States, 2001-
2005
August 31, 2007
[Announcer] This podcast is presented by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention. CDC – safer,
healthier people.
[Matthew Reynolds] Welcome to A Cup of Health with CDC, a weekly broadcast
of the
MMWR, the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. I’m your host, Matthew
Reynolds.
Underage drinking is the number one contributor to teenage deaths in the United
States. As part of an effort to reduce underage drinking, the federal government
supports research on teen exposure to alcohol advertising. Georgetown University’s
Dr.
David Jernigan was an author of a recent study that reviewed alcohol advertising
and
suggests that parents can lessen the risk of their teens’ use of alcohol.
Dr. Jernigan,
welcome to the show.
[Dr. Jernigan] Thank you for having me.
[Matthew Reynolds] How many teenage deaths are attributable to alcohol each
year
and are these cases due to alcohol poisoning alone?
[Dr. Jernigan] The Surgeon General’s estimated that about 5,000 deaths
of people
under age 21 are the result of underage drinking each year. And, actually alcohol
poisoning is just the tip of the ice berg. These deaths are caused by motor
vehicle
crashes, that’s the single largest category, along with other unintentional
injuries, like
drownings and falls, and actually, much of adolescent homicide and suicide
is related to
alcohol use.
[Matthew Reynolds] Your study included a review of 250 national magazines with
youth exposure to alcohol advertisements. Why magazines and what did you find?
[Dr. Jernigan] The Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth here at Georgetown
actually monitors youth exposure to alcohol advertising in magazines, on the
radio, and
on television - the three major measured media. What we ended up with in our
study
was about 143 magazines, national magazines, that had alcohol advertising in
them,
and for which we could get audience data from the industry standard source
for such
data - a market research company called Media Mark Research, Incorporated.
And
what we found is that the new alcohol industry standard of 30 percent maximum
youth
audiences for where they place their advertising is having an effect. There’s
been a
substantial decline in advertising in magazines with youth audiences larger
than 30
percent of the total magazine audience, but there’s still a tremendous
amount of alcohol
advertising in magazines that are more likely to be read by youth, per capita,
than by
adults. In fact, over 80 percent of youth exposure to alcohol advertising is
in these
youth-oriented magazines.
[Matthew Reynolds] National media have reported on another recent MMWR study
about a preference among teenagers who drink to reach for liquor over beer
and wine.
Did your study look at exposure to liquor advertisements?
[Dr. Jernigan] In fact, liquor ads are the single largest category of alcohol
advertising in
magazines. They were responsible for about two thirds of the advertising and
close to
70 percent of youth exposure. But at the same time, advertisements for Alcopops,
these
new flavored malt beverages, were the most likely to have their advertising
in youthoriented
magazines. About 90 percent of the youth exposure to Alcopops advertising
came in those magazines.
[Matthew Reynolds] Did any of the advertisements encourage responsible drinking?
[Dr. Jernigan] There’s a tiny segment, about three percent of all the
ads were primarily
‘responsible drinking’ messages, but here, as in other studies that
our Center has done,
we find that youth are completely overwhelmed with product messages about alcohol
and that the ‘responsibility’ advertising is, at best, a drop in
the bucket.
[Matthew Reynolds] Based on the findings of your study, what are your
recommendations for alcohol advertising in magazines?
[Dr. Jernigan] There’s a common sense solution that the National Research
Council
and the Institute of Medicine recommended in 2003 when they looked at the whole
issue of underage drinking. They suggested that the industry should move immediately
to a 25 percent maximum for where they put there, for youth audiences of the
publications where they put their ads, and that they should eventually move
towards a
15 percent maximum. Because 15 percent is roughly the population of 12 to 20
years in
the general population of 12 and above which is the population that’s
measured for
magazine readership. So a 15 percent maximum would basically say OK just put
your
ads in places where kids are less likely to be in the reading audience than
adults of a
legal drinking age. And, of course, this kind of monitoring of youth exposure
to alcohol
advertising needs to continue. It’s expensive; it needs funding from
the federal
government, which actually, Congress has authorized but not yet appropriated.
[Matthew Reynolds] What advice would you give to the parents of teenagers or
even
children who are close to being teenagers? What are their options?
[Dr. Jernigan] Well, there’s three things that parents need to do. First,
we need to be
aware, as parents, of how much our kids are drinking and how they’re
drinking. More
than 90 percent of the alcohol consumed by young people is drunk when the drinker
is
having five or more drinks on a single occasion. Kids use alcohol to get drunk.
They’re
not having a glass of wine with lunch. So we need to talk to our kids about
drinking. We
also need to be aware of how much alcohol advertising and promotion our kids
are
exposed to. Our studies have found that parents are, in fact, the least likely
group to be
exposed to this kind of advertising. So it’s difficult to know how much
pressure our kids
are under. But, it’s very clear from our studies that they see a tremendous
amount of it.
So we need to aware of the advertising and talk to our kids about how alcohol
advertising will never tell the whole story about adolescent alcohol use. And,
then as
parents, we also need to say to the alcohol companies – “Look, there’s
no reason for
you to be placing your ads in places where our kids are more likely to see
it than we
are. We think you can do a better job of how you place your advertising and
we think
our kids deserve better from you.”
[Matthew Reynolds] Dr. Jernigan, thank you so much for taking the time to share
this
information with our listeners today.
[Dr. Jernigan] My pleasure.
[Matthew Reynolds] That’s it for this week’s show. Don’t
forget to join us next week.
Until then, be well. This is Matthew Reynolds for A Cup of Health with CDC.
[Announcer] To access the most accurate and relevant health information that
affects you, your family
and your community, please visit www.cdc.gov.