欢迎来到VOA在线收网 www.voa365.com
当前位置:VOA NEWS > VOA慢速英语 > 教育报道 >

US College Students Missing Meals to Drink More Alcohol

2016-08-24 07:07来源:未知

音频下载

A new study is suggesting that some college students might be missing meals so they can drink more alcohol.
Popular culture often shows alcohol as a big part of the college experience in the United States.

 

Television programs and movies about American college life have images of wild parties with young people either drinking alcohol or holding a drink.

 

Now, a new study of alcohol use suggests that some college students may be missing meals so they can have more drinks or get drunk faster. Researchers are calling this kind of behavior, "drunkorexia."

 

The study involved 1,184 college students between the ages of 18 and 26 years. Most of the students attended the University of Houston in Houston, Texas, while the others went to school in other parts of the country.

 

Researchers asked the students about their alcohol use. They found that 80 percent of those studied had demonstrated some kind of drunkorexia in the past three months. They had performed heavy physical exercise, eaten low calorie meals or even missed meals for up to a full day before drinking alcohol.

 

Dipali Rinker organized the study and presented its findings to the Research Society on Alcoholism in June. Rinker teaches psychology at the University of Houston. She says students see drunkorexia as way to keep their body weight down while drinking alcohol. And it causes them to feel the effects of alcohol quickly and with more intensity.

 

Rinker says unhealthy eating habits are only one of the reasons this type of behavior is dangerous. Heavy drinking is linked to drunk driving – operating a vehicle while drunk -- unprotected sex, sexual assault and alcohol poisoning.

 

The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism is a U.S. governmental agency that studies alcohol related problems. It found that about 1,825 college students between 18 and 24 years old die from alcohol-related injuries every year.

 

Nicole Mattern attends the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. She says drinking is common among the students she knows at the school.

 

It is a violation of U.S. law for anyone under the age of 21 to buy alcoholic drinks. But Mattern says many students under 21 use false documents to enter drinking establishments and buy alcohol.

 

Mattern says she and her friends only drink alcohol in their free time after their schoolwork is done. But she believes that drinking is an undeniable part of life on a U.S. college campus.

 

"Young people have normalized the drinking culture. Some people have been drinking since they were 16 and they’re not just going to stop because they’re in a different environment."

 

The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism looked at how often college students used alcohol in 2014. It found that almost 60 percent of college students between 18 and 22 years old had at least one drink in the month before being asked about their drinking habits.

 

Rinker at the University of Houston says one reason alcohol use is so common is because students believe everyone around them is drinking. They believe they are expected to drink and get drunk.

 

"There’s this sense of invincibility and the sense this is time in life in which it’s sort of okay … to push those boundaries a little bit. So when you combine the … perception of 'This is okay. This is what you do in college. This is what other college students are doing' … with this developmental time period … all of that creates a context for engaging in heavy and risky drinking behaviors."

 

George Koob directs the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. He says another reason young adults turn to alcohol is that they have a great deal of freedom. He says this mainly affects students in their first year of college.

 

"This may be different in other countries, but in the United States for sure, this is the first time they’ve left home, in many cases. It’s the first time they have an unstructured environment. It’s the first time they’re independent. And all these things lead to them needing to make choices."

 

First year students often drink with more intensity than others, Koob adds. However, both he and Rinker agree that students in sports programs, college fraternities and sororities drink more than other students.

 

Koob says that the percent of students using alcohol has not increased in recent years. But what worries him is that the number of students drinking to the point of "blacking out" has increased.

 

Blacking out is when a person drinks so much alcohol they have no memory of their actions while drunk.

 

Blacking out often results from "binge drinking." The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism defines binge drinking differently for men and women because their bodies process alcohol differently. For a woman, binge drinking means having at least four alcoholic drinks in two hours. For a man it means having at least five drinks over the same period.

 

The institute reported that almost 38 percent of students between 18 and 22 years old "binge drank" in the month before being asked about their drinking habits in 2014.

 

Koob notes that college students in Canada and Europe also face issues with alcohol. But he feels a big part of the problem is that Americans do not fully understand alcohol’s effects. Most people do not know that the part of the brain where decisions are made is not fully developed until age 25.

 

Most people do not know that alcohol harms the development of that part of the brain, he adds.

 

Koob and Rinker agree that there are many different ways schools can try to deal with the issue of student drinking. There is no single best method.

 

The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism released a report listing many different possibilities for school administrators last year.

 

The report, called CollegeAIM, said colleges can attempt to ban alcohol use completely. But this has yet to be shown as the most effective solution.

 

Koob and Rinker say schools must at least educate students about safe drinking. Also, schools should try to show students that their ideas about drinking are not completely true.

 

Rinker says young people need to know that many of their student peers do not drink large amounts of alcohol. Schools must also continue discussing the issue of alcohol with students throughout their period of study. Most schools only offer training to students during their first year, she says.

 

Ken Ballom is the dean of students at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The college rating service Princeton Review listed the school as the number one party school out of 380 schools in 2015.

 

Ballom say he is not sure why his university is considered a party school. He feels it is better known for its academic programs. But he understands that all universities must do all they can to address the problems of alcohol use on their campuses.

 

The University of Illinois works with the local police to prevent alcohol-related incidents. The school also offers medical amnesty. This means the university does not punish students for violating rules governing alcohol if the students seek medical assistance.

 

But Ballom says the best solutions begin with communication. He feels that students, parents and administrators all must discuss how alcohol affects the college environment.

 

"Parents of current or incoming students play a role in being involved in addressing alcohol related matters with their sons and daughters."

 

Ballom says that students should understand that alcohol is not an important part of the college experience. And, he adds, there are many activities for college students that do not involve alcohol.


Words in This Story

 

calorien. a unit of heat used to indicate the amount of energy that foods will produce in the human body

 

habit(s) – n. something that a person does often in a regular and repeated way

 

drunkn. having drank so much alcohol that normal actions such as talking, thinking, and moving become difficult to do

 

sexual assaultn. the crime of touching someone sexually without that person's permission

 

campusn. the area and buildings around a university, college or school

 

normalize(d) – v. to make someone or something that is usually considered unusual or abnormal become considered as normal

 

invincibilityn. the state of being impossible to defeat or overcome

 

boundariesn. unofficial rules about what should not be done

 

perceptionn. the way you think about or understand someone or something

 

engaging in p.v. doing something

 

fraternitiesn. social organizations of male students at a U.S. college

 

sororitiesn. social organizations of female students at a U.S. college

 

peer(s) – n. a person who belongs to the same age group or social group as someone else

 

deann. a person whose job is to give advice to the students in a college or high school and to make sure that they obey the school's rules

 

academicadj. of or relating to schools and education

 

amnestyn. a decision that a group of people will not be punished or that a group of prisoners will be allowed to go free

 

(责任编辑:v365)
最新新闻
  1. 网传日月光Q4产能利用率降至70%
  2. 新型存储器已经开始增长,到20
  3. 市场人士透露:联发科在汽车芯片
  4. 【VOA在线闲聊】三星收购Arm会步英
  5. Nikola召回迄今为止生产的93辆Nik
  6. 蚂蚁数科两项区块链专利完成一对
  7. 蔚来申请注册“NIO CERTIFIED 蔚来官
  8. 获小米超千万投资 改装车公司工
  9. 法拉第未来首款电动汽车FF 91再次
  10. 消息称LG显示计划明年生产920万块
  11. 宝马面向欧洲市场推出最小的跨界
  12. 美国副总统哈里斯承诺就电动汽车
  13. 知情人士透露称马斯克和推特CE
  14. 因苹果缩减订单 台积电或修改明
  15. LG推出一项新技术,以开放局域网
  16. 小米13正式上线:骁龙8Gen2发布1
  17. 米家3 KG迷你洗衣机售价699元
  18. 苹果公司官方非常兴奋:印度将生
  19. 中国广电在全国31个省区开通广电
  20. 华为 Mate 50 Pro国外上市:售价远高
  21. 特斯拉柏林超级工厂回收工厂发生
  22. 华为 Mate 50原价4999
  23. iPhone 14销售比上一代下降了11%
  24. 2021至2025中国台湾将投350亿元新台
  25. 华为Mate50Pro预定5 G芯片,苹果公司
  26. 锐龙7000核显性能实测 单核及多核
  27. 索尼PS5最新更新:6 nm制程功率与
  28. 华为会议马上就要开始了!一种全
  29. 小米再次成为了冠军!该系列产品
  30. 还能吸收病毒?!戴森首个产品也
  31. 小米又推出了一款新产品,售价
  32. Imagination携手百度飞桨创建Model
  33. 奔驰要不要再加价?2024将发布
  34. TikTok在英国或被罚款2900万美元 被
  35. iPhone15PM改用 ULTRA:笔记本和 iPa
  36. 因库存不断提升存储芯片持续降价
  37. 预计小米Civi2将推出五款新产品
  38. 可靠商务桌面电脑推荐:联想M4
  39. 受飓风影响:NASA撤回阿尔忒弥斯
  40. 《三体》影迷们疯狂了!
  41. 4090设计实在是太离谱了!
  42. Meta试图Facebook和Instagram账户添加到
  43. 苹果公司在技术上遭受重大挫折,
  44. 我国成功发射遥感三十六号卫星,
  45. 骁龙8Gen2+120 W快速充电!小米13系
  46. 屏幕下手机价格大跌,灵动岛安卓
  47. 亚马逊宣布下月举办新会员促销活
  48. 酷睿i9-13900K预告片,5.8 GHz稳定!
  49. 美国流媒体巨头Netflix宣布在芬兰
  50. 外科手术机器人 商业化将加快世