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UC Davis Program Credited with Decrease in High-Risk Drinking
April 17, 2009

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News Summary

Students at the University of California at Davis are limiting the amount of high-risk drinking they participate in as a result of a major prevention initiative, a new survey concludes.

UC Davis' Safe Party Initiative focused on reducing alcohol-related problems at off-campus parties; students participating in a 2003 survey said roughly one-third of alcohol-related problems take place at such parties. The program included outreach efforts, a program website, and messages targeting incoming students, student-athletes, and members of fraternities and sororities.

A recent campus survey showed that binge drinking -- defined as consuming five or more drinks at a sitting for men, and four or more drinks for women -- has decreased from 31 percent to 20 percent over the four years the program has been in place. The survey also showed that underage drinking fell from 55 percent to 47 percent, and that the occurance of student drinking with the intention of getting drunk or intoxicated dropped 10 percent.

"As a community, we have worked together and made a real difference in this problem," said Michelle Famula, director of Student Health Services at UC Davis.

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by JD on 20 Apr 09 10:18 AM EDT
Excellant! Any type of pro-active program that teaches responsible alcohol consumption is a good idea. I made my two college aged children read: Clear Thinking When Drinking: The Handbook for Responsible Alcohol Consumption, which sets clearly defined guidelines.

Posted by George in Westwood on 20 Apr 09 04:17 PM EDT
This sounds like the old Social Norms program. Just what part of "if you are under 21, possession/consumption of alcohol is against the law" do they not understand, or is the law different in California? Is there a social host liability law in CA?

Posted by John Jung on 20 Apr 09 06:06 PM EDT
Sounds as if the study relied on annual (repeated) self-reports of drinking. Declines may be partially due to socially desirable responses. Were there any correlated declines on other indicators such as vandalism, public intoxication, aggression under the influence, driving under the influence, etc? If so, reporting them would help corroborate the self reported drinking declines.

Posted by Mark F on 21 Apr 09 12:20 PM EDT
The News Summary uses Study and survey interchangeably, despite the fact that no details of the study methodology were presented. If cross-sectional survey 1 occurred 2 weeks after spring break and survey 2 occurred 2 weeks before spring break, I could imagine such results without any intervention.

Posted by mhb on 03 May 09 09:13 PM EDT
I would love to see multiple colleges launch various differently designed pilot programs aimed at making a real dent with this population. I was at a college campus last weekend where the students explained to me there is zero prevention or concern unless you get caught, that the college's attitude is that if you get caught that is how they know you have a problem. If you don't get caught, have a fine time, you obviously don't have a problem.

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