National Academy
of Sciences and Institute of Medicine Report
Reducing Underage Drinking - A Collective Responsibility
On September 9, 2003, the National Academy of Sciences and Institute of Medicine released “Reducing Underage Drinking - A Collective Responsibility,” a report that offers a comprehensive strategy to curb underage drinking. The report exposes the largely invisible public health epidemic of underage drinking, analyzes the most recent data on this problem, and addresses the best strategies for preventing youth from using and abusing alcohol.
More young people drink alcohol than use other drugs or smoke tobacco, and underage drinking costs the nation an estimated $53 billion annually in losses stemming from traffic fatalities, violent crime, and other behaviors that threaten the well-being of America's youth. To tackle the problem, the report offers a comprehensive, national plan that requires a shared commitment from many institutions and individuals, including alcohol manufacturers and retail businesses, the entertainment industry, and parents and other adults in local communities.
| AMA
Responds to IOM Report with Community Action Tools
The American Medical Association's Office of Alcohol and Other Drug Use has developed a tool kit to assist local coalitions using the recommendations to advance their prevention initiatives. |
Key findings from the report include:
Key recommendations from the report include:
College Drinking and Communities
The extensive report includes a chapter on the importance of community mobilization in fighting underage drinking, with a section devoted to collaborations between communities and colleges (pages 228-232). If your time to devote to reading this report is limited, be sure to read this chapter.
Recognizing that college students can benefit from a healthy campus and community environment, the chapter is consistent with the Higher Education Center’s comprehensive environmental approach to alcohol prevention, and cites the Center’s statewide initiative efforts. In addition, the achievements of several colleges involved in the A Matter of Degree program are provided as examples of how college-community coalitions have been successful. The chapter also includes information about other successful community coalitions and provides the evidence of effectiveness, including examples of what works and ingredients of success.
Visit the Institute of Medicine for the full report or to read the press release announcing its findings.
The executive summary of the report has been reprinted in a visually attractive format for use by groups and organizations to disseminate. The reprint booklet was illustrated and produced by FACE – Truth and Clarity on Alcohol and can be ordered at their website.
Media Stories on the IOM report
Severe
Steps to Curb Teen Drinking Urged
Alcohol Industry Denounces Report
Washington Post
Is
the alcohol industry pitching products to young audiences?
Congress hears two views
The New York Times
New
report targets teen drinking
Study urges tougher laws, alcohol taxes and better ID cards
MSNBC News
It
takes a team to curb youth drinking
A new report outlines a number of stronger steps to be taken to reduce alcohol
consumption by minors
American Medical News
Alcohol
Ads
Let’s add a voice of moderation to the mix
The San Diego Union-Tribune
OUR
OPINIONS: Teen drinking begins with adults
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Remembering
Casey
The San Francisco Chronicle
Dispel
myths, save lives
USA Today
Statements of Support
The Center for Marketing and Youth
Center for Science in the Public Interest
Mothers Against Drunk Drinking
American Medical Association (.pdf file requiring Adobe Acrobat)
Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America (.pdf file requiring Adobe Acrobat)
Governors Highway Safety Coalition
Last Update: February 2, 2006