The risk of experiencing symptoms of alcohol use disorder and negative consequences from drinking in young adulthood was also higher
Children and teenagers of any age who sip or taste alcohol with
their parents' permission are more likely to engage in risky drinking in young
adulthood.
That was the finding of a new study my colleagues and I published
in the journal Addictive Behaviours.
In the study, we examined questionnaires
filled out annually between 2009 and 2018 by 387 adolescents starting at age 11
and an accompanying parent. Topics included history of child and parent alcohol
use, beliefs about alcohol and rules about alcohol in the home. The
questionnaires also asked adolescents if they ever drank alcohol with their
parents' permission, even just a few sips – and if yes, at what age they first
did so.
We analysed whether drinking alcohol with parental permission during
adolescence predicted alcohol outcomes in young adulthood, at ages 18 to 20.
These outcomes included how often and how much they drank, alcohol use disorder
symptoms and negative consequences such as self-injury and regretting things
said while drinking.
Then, we looked at whether the age at
which this practice began affected likelihood of risky drinking. In our
analysis, we also accounted for factors such as peer alcohol use, parental
alcohol use and personality.
In our sample, drinking with parental permission began anywhere
from age 5 to age 17, but typically started around age 12. We found that about
80 per cent of the adolescents responded that they had drunk alcohol with
parental permission.
That number is higher than in some other
studies, most likely because our study had a wide age range. Research exploring
this topic generally focuses on younger adolescents, who are less likely to be
allowed to try alcohol by their parents, but this practice becomes more common
as adolescents get older.
We found that adolescents were more likely in young adulthood to drink more
often and in greater amounts in families that allowed this practice compared
with those that did not.
The risk of experiencing symptoms of
alcohol use disorder and negative consequences from drinking in young adulthood
was also higher. Importantly, the age at which drinking with parents'
permission began did not change this effect.
Why
it matters
Parents play a critical role in teaching
their children about alcohol. The family is often the first context in which
children are introduced to alcohol, either by trying it themselves or by
observing others drinking. In the US, studies suggest that 30 per cent to 40
per cent of children under age 13 try alcohol with parental permission.
Many parents view this as a protective
strategy, believing that it reduces curiosity about alcohol and provides an
opportunity to supervise safe drinking. Yet studies from several research
groups have found that parents providing alcohol, even just sips or tastes,
actually increases rather than decreases future drinking.
Our study is the first to explore whether
the age that trying alcohol with parental permission makes a difference for
increased potential of later alcohol use. Overall, the findings can inform
public health messages explaining the risks of allowing adolescents to try
alcohol at any age.
Why might parental permission to sip or
taste alcohol increase risk? Some scientists have speculated that it may
promote the belief that parents approve of underage drinking and shift
children's attitudes and beliefs to be more pro-alcohol.
Ongoing and still unpublished work in our
lab supports this. Namely, it strengthens their beliefs in the potential
positive outcomes of drinking, such as making parties more fun, and weakens
their beliefs in the potential negative outcomes, such as getting in trouble.
What
still isn't known
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