Monday, 23 March 2015

Government anti-drinking messages irrelevant to young binge drinkers, study finds





Government anti-drinking messages irrelevant to young binge drinkers, study finds


Government advertising campaigns to tackle excessive drinking are dismissed as irrelevant by young binge drinkers, because consuming extreme quantities of alcohol is part of their sub-cultural social identity, according to research published this week (18th March) in the Journal of Business Research.



Researchers from Royal Holloway, University of London, together with a team from three other UK universities, discovered that official messages are unlikely to work with groups where behaviour is motivated by the need to subvert rules and norms.


Indeed, their study suggested that multi-million pound anti- campaigns could even have an adverse effect on the people most at risk of drinking excessively. Instead, the researchers suggested that more targeted and practical interventions may be more effective than mass media campaigns.


In England, alcohol is responsible for 1.2 million annual hospital admissions, 15,500 deaths, and an annual cost to the UK National Health Service of £3.5 billion.


Professor Chris Hackley, from the School of Management at Royal Holloway, said: "The insight that heavy drinking can be part of a rule-breaking sub-culture may seem obvious, yet huge sums have been spent in the past on Government anti-drinking advertising campaigns that simply fuel the sense that sensible drinking is boring and conformist, while is subversive fun."


The researchers analysed data from a sample of 89 in the UK between 2004 and 2007. Data sets included interview and discussion group transcripts, ethnographic field notes compiled on nights out, and analysis of 200 alcohol advertisements. The study is the latest in a series of work deriving from the data.


"Government messages that say 'drink sensibly' ignore the ways many young people actually enjoy drinking. This research also has implications for other areas of Government health policy, where compulsive and excessive consumption can sometimes be fuelled by a need to defy and subvert official rules."



Medical Xpress on facebook


Related Stories


The more friends you drink with... the more you drink


Mar 03, 2015

Sometimes it is useful to show in a well conducted study something which one suspects could well be true. A new study published today by the scientific journal Addiction shows that alcohol consumption of individuals appear ...



'Drink less' campaigns should focus on why and how


Feb 11, 2015

Campaigns to get young people to drink less should focus on the benefits of not drinking and how it can be achieved, a new study suggests.



Protein in the brain can 'put the brakes' on binge drinking


Mar 09, 2015

A new study led by University of North Carolina School of Medicine researchers has found that a naturally-occurring protein in the brain can act to suppress binge alcohol drinking, a major public health problem ...



Many people who drink a lot aren't alcoholics: CDC


Nov 20, 2014

(HealthDay)—Most people who drink to excess or binge drink are not alcoholics, a new U.S. government report says.



Alcohol apps aimed at young


Dec 22, 2014

Apps with names like 'Let's get Wasted!' and 'Drink Thin' have led a James Cook University Professor to call for Government action on alcohol advertising on mobile devices.





Recommended for you



Medication error reporting not indicative of patient safety


19 minutes ago

A comparative study at two Australian hospitals suggests that hospitals' incident data have significant shortcomings, especially as the basis for monitoring safety over time and between sites.



Study shows homeless people with mental health conditions benefit from personalized primary care


34 minutes ago

Homeless people with mental health conditions have a better primary care experience in clinics tailored to their unique needs, according to a study co-authored by University of Maryland School of Public Health researcher ...




Legalizing marijuana and the new science of weed


1 hour ago

More than a year into Colorado's experiment legalizing marijuana, labs testing the plants are able for the first time to take stock of the drug's potency and contaminants—and openly paint a picture of what's ...



'Dizziness', the super-tobacco hooking UAE teens


Mar 22, 2015

Despite campaigns on the risks of smoking, teenagers in the United Arab Emirates are turning to a little-known tobacco product five times more potent than cigarettes and said to cause seizures.




Global conference declares all tobacco products harmful


Mar 21, 2015

A global anti-tobacco conference that ended Saturday urged countries to take steps to reduce the consumption of tobacco, which it said was a leading cause of disease and death worldwide.



Health experts defend e-cigarettes despite concerns (Update)


Mar 20, 2015

Health experts at an anti-tobacco conference in Abu Dhabi defended e-cigarettes on Friday, dismissing widespread concerns that the devices could lure adolescents into nicotine addiction.




User comments



Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more


Click here to reset your password.

Sign in to get notified via email when new comments are made.










Government anti-drinking messages irrelevant to young binge drinkers, study finds


Government advertising campaigns to tackle excessive drinking are dismissed as irrelevant by young binge drinkers, because consuming extreme quantities of alcohol is part of their sub-cultural social identity, according to research published this week (18th March) in the Journal of Business Research.



Researchers from Royal Holloway, University of London, together with a team from three other UK universities, discovered that official messages are unlikely to work with groups where behaviour is motivated by the need to subvert rules and norms.


Indeed, their study suggested that multi-million pound anti- campaigns could even have an adverse effect on the people most at risk of drinking excessively. Instead, the researchers suggested that more targeted and practical interventions may be more effective than mass media campaigns.


In England, alcohol is responsible for 1.2 million annual hospital admissions, 15,500 deaths, and an annual cost to the UK National Health Service of £3.5 billion.


Professor Chris Hackley, from the School of Management at Royal Holloway, said: "The insight that heavy drinking can be part of a rule-breaking sub-culture may seem obvious, yet huge sums have been spent in the past on Government anti-drinking advertising campaigns that simply fuel the sense that sensible drinking is boring and conformist, while is subversive fun."


The researchers analysed data from a sample of 89 in the UK between 2004 and 2007. Data sets included interview and discussion group transcripts, ethnographic field notes compiled on nights out, and analysis of 200 alcohol advertisements. The study is the latest in a series of work deriving from the data.


"Government messages that say 'drink sensibly' ignore the ways many young people actually enjoy drinking. This research also has implications for other areas of Government health policy, where compulsive and excessive consumption can sometimes be fuelled by a need to defy and subvert official rules."



Medical Xpress on facebook


Related Stories


The more friends you drink with... the more you drink


Mar 03, 2015

Sometimes it is useful to show in a well conducted study something which one suspects could well be true. A new study published today by the scientific journal Addiction shows that alcohol consumption of individuals appear ...



'Drink less' campaigns should focus on why and how


Feb 11, 2015

Campaigns to get young people to drink less should focus on the benefits of not drinking and how it can be achieved, a new study suggests.



Protein in the brain can 'put the brakes' on binge drinking


Mar 09, 2015

A new study led by University of North Carolina School of Medicine researchers has found that a naturally-occurring protein in the brain can act to suppress binge alcohol drinking, a major public health problem ...



Many people who drink a lot aren't alcoholics: CDC


Nov 20, 2014

(HealthDay)—Most people who drink to excess or binge drink are not alcoholics, a new U.S. government report says.



Alcohol apps aimed at young


Dec 22, 2014

Apps with names like 'Let's get Wasted!' and 'Drink Thin' have led a James Cook University Professor to call for Government action on alcohol advertising on mobile devices.





Recommended for you



Medication error reporting not indicative of patient safety


19 minutes ago

A comparative study at two Australian hospitals suggests that hospitals' incident data have significant shortcomings, especially as the basis for monitoring safety over time and between sites.



Study shows homeless people with mental health conditions benefit from personalized primary care


34 minutes ago

Homeless people with mental health conditions have a better primary care experience in clinics tailored to their unique needs, according to a study co-authored by University of Maryland School of Public Health researcher ...




Legalizing marijuana and the new science of weed


1 hour ago

More than a year into Colorado's experiment legalizing marijuana, labs testing the plants are able for the first time to take stock of the drug's potency and contaminants—and openly paint a picture of what's ...



'Dizziness', the super-tobacco hooking UAE teens


Mar 22, 2015

Despite campaigns on the risks of smoking, teenagers in the United Arab Emirates are turning to a little-known tobacco product five times more potent than cigarettes and said to cause seizures.




Global conference declares all tobacco products harmful


Mar 21, 2015

A global anti-tobacco conference that ended Saturday urged countries to take steps to reduce the consumption of tobacco, which it said was a leading cause of disease and death worldwide.



Health experts defend e-cigarettes despite concerns (Update)


Mar 20, 2015

Health experts at an anti-tobacco conference in Abu Dhabi defended e-cigarettes on Friday, dismissing widespread concerns that the devices could lure adolescents into nicotine addiction.




User comments



Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more


Click here

to reset your password.


Sign in to get notified via email when new comments are made.











Categories:

0 comments:

Post a Comment