- cross-posted to:
- worldnews@lemmit.online
- unitedkingdom
- cross-posted to:
- worldnews@lemmit.online
- unitedkingdom
Study by World Health Organization shows more than half of children in Britain had drunk alcohol by age 13
Archived version: https://archive.ph/mtJSB
The study seems to be about first time having alcohol, but the reporting is equating this with alcohol abuse. I don’t think this is very good reporting at all. Your parents letting you have half a glass of champagne at a cousin’s wedding would seem to count here, but is a wildly different experience to the one implied by this reporting.
I absolutely believe the UK has a youth drinking problem, but I don’t believe this study is necessarily one the media should be pointing to to prove it.
Even without reading the article, you can see they’re phrasing the highest rate of people who’d drunk once by 13 as the worst rate of child alcohol consumption. A lot of that consumption would’ve been legal and nothing untoward.
Even without reading the article
To be honest I thought the same, but I wanted to verify that the summary wasn’t simply misleading, which is why I went in and read the article in greater depth before commenting. Maybe the article itself had more to say. But nope, that’s really all there is to it.
Well, you have a strain of intellectual honesty and patience that I was lacking in that fateful day.
The reportage here may not be doing the study justice. They most likely used other metrics.
I notice the BBC on same subject talks about children actually being drunk and about “last 30 days” both of which are better proxies.
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Beating the Russians at their own game? Impressive.
There’s only one answer. Whippets for kids. /s
I’d bet on the French, or Finnish