With the season of spring break in full swing, it’s a ripe time to discuss binge drinking on college campuses.
Spring break is a time when students tend to excessively drink. Many studies show that people increase drinking as a way to increase pleasure associated with celebrations and get-togethers.
Because of alcohol’s legality, we often conflate alcohol with celebration and see it as a lesser evil in the context of substances. However, this perspective is deeply flawed. Alcohol abuse wreaks havoc on lives.
Despite a push for widespread awareness, decades of research, and campus task forces, binge drinking on college campuses in the United States holds as much threat to the livelihood and academic performance of students as ever before, putting more young people at risk of things like sexual assault and even death.
While many freshmen show up to college having already drunk alcohol, aspects of college life, such us unstructured time, distance from family, and academic expectations, create an atmosphere for drinking that can lead to binge drinking.
What is binge drinking?
Binge drinking is defined as a pattern of drinking that hikes blood alcohol concentration to levels at 0.08 or above. This is equivalent to women drinking about four drinks, and men five drinks, in around two hours.
According to a New York Times article, for two decades the rate of binge drinking among college students has hovered above 40 percent. Studies have shown that the urge to party harder is increasing with many young people drinking to black out. Liquor is being chosen over beer, and drinking often begins in advance of a party or social event.
Drinking to excess is not only an activity in college, but it’s often considered by students a right and part of the whole academic experience. For example, rated as the number one “party school,” Syracuse University tried to limit an outdoor gathering which led to outraged students calling the campus a police state.
According to a report released by the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, in the past month, around 60 percent of college students ages 18–22 drank alcohol; nearly two out of three of them engaged in binge drinking during that same timeframe.
Excessive drinking has immediate consequences that present serious health and safety risks including:
- Car crashes
- Drunk driving arrests and/or accidents
- Sexual assaults and/or injuries
Long-term effects of binge drinking pose serious damage to internal organs.
Estimated yearly statistics regarding binge drinking on college campuses by students between the ages of 18 and 24 were noted by the NIAAA as:
Alcohol Poisoning
- Thousands of college students are transported to the hospital yearly due to alcohol poisoning. Alcohol poisoning can lead to brain damage or death and early onset symptoms include mental confusion, hypothermia, vomiting, bluish or pale skin, irregular breathing
Death
- Around 1,825 college students die from alcohol-related, accidental injuries such as vehicular accidents
Assault
- Around 696,000 students are injured by another student who has been drinking
Sexual Assault:
- About 97,000 students report being sexually assaulted that has been linked to drinking
Academic Problems:
- About one in four college students report alcohol as having a negative effect on their academic performance, such as missing class, falling behind, failing tests, and receiving low grades.
Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)
- Defined as a chronic relapsing brain disease, AUD is characterized by compulsive alcohol use, loss of control, and depressed state when not drinking. Nearly 16 million adults in the U.S. have AUD
- Around 20 percent of college students fit the criteria for AUD
Other Consequences
- Other consequences of binge drinking are related to the lack of inhibitions: unsafe sex, drunk driving, putting oneself in unsafe situations, using other substances, making general poor choices that could ultimately affect one’s future
It is suggested that, in order to avoid binge drinking, one tracks his or her drink in order to stay in a safe zone.
A standard drink is equivalent to about 12 ounces of 5% beer, 5 ounces of 12% wine, or 1.5 ounces of 40% proof liquor. However, complying to these standards is difficult considering the difference in alcohol content or a mixed drink being poured strong.
One of the best ways to prevent binge drinking has been found in parental guidance. Parents who discuss adverse effects of alcohol and the potential consequences are often less likely to drink, especially excessively, according to the NIAAA.
Many schools have been working toward implementing programs of alcohol education and awareness in order to combat and decrease binge drinking among students. Of course, some students need individual attention as excessive alcohol abuse may be a symptom of a deeper problem, in which case, individual intervention is critical for the best outcome.
Unfortunately, it will most likely be a while before we are able to separate the interwoven identity of college and wild parties of drinking.
If you know someone who has lost control, or if you wonder yourself if your drinking is adversely affecting your life, do not hesitate to contact Fair Oaks Recovery Center to talk about treatment. Just because a substance is legal does not mean it’s not lethal.