HOMELESSHOUSINGRESOURCES.COM Should kids be allowed to drink at home?

What messages are UK parents sending out to their children about alcohol? In many homes, drinking is simply not discussed. In others, kids are occasio



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Should kids be allowed to drink at home?

What messages are UK parents sending out to their children about alcohol? In many homes, drinking is simply not discussed.

June 27, 2008
By Kirsty Egan-Carter
Category: tutorials
Related Articles: teenagers and rehab; children and drink problems; underage drinking
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What messages are UK parents sending out to their children about alcohol? In many homes, drinking is simply not discussed. In others, kids are occasionally permitted to try a sip of a parent’s drink.

And some parents follow the European model, allowing their children to have a glass of diluted wine or beer with meals. The theory is that, when presented with a relaxed approach to alcohol, children are less likely to see it as ‘forbidden fruit’, which takes the glamour out of excessive drinking as they mature.

This last approach seems to work well in France and Italy, where teenagers drink far less than their British counterparts, where moderate drinking typically accompanies a leisurely meal, and where culturally, drunkenness in people of all ages is frowned upon.

But the British attitude to drinking is far more complex – as is our nation’s problem with underage drinking. Government research shows that more than half of underage drinkers get their supplies from home, while 11- to 14-year-olds are now drinking double the number of units they did in 1990. And according to Alcohol Concern, 1,000 children under the age of 15 are admitted to hospitals each year with acute alcohol poisoning.

In response, the UK government recently announced that parents could be prosecuted for allowing their children to try alcohol at home, as part of its crack-down on the widespread binge drinking culture. Currently, any child aged five or over is legally allowed to try alcohol at home under their parents’ supervision -- but the government review will consider whether the legal age limit should be raised.

Whatever the outcome, it’s clear that British parents must do more to guide and direct their children’s first experiences with alcohol if they are to steer them clear of

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