The New York Times, October 3, 2000
Colleges Shift
Emphasis on Drinking
By KATE ZERNIKE
In recent years,
colleges have spent millions of dollars on scare tactics
aimed at reducing
binge drinking — posters showing students covered with
vomit, displays of
cars wrecked by drunken drivers — yet student drinking
rates have remained
unchanged.
Now, concluding those campaigns may have actually encouraged
heavy drinking,
colleges across the country are trying a new tactic: saying
students don't
drink so much, after all. To the surprise of many, the
approach has produced
marked declines in the number of students who say they
drink heavily.
The premises of the new strategy are that binge drinking
has been exaggerated
and that, by harping on it, colleges have pushed
students into thinking that
heavy drinking fits the model of the American
college student.
Under the new strategy, though, rather than scare
students about the dangers
of drink, the colleges are introducing campaigns
that cite statistics
indicating that, in fact, most students drink in
moderation.
Proponents admit that the data is limited to a handful of
campuses. But the
declines at those colleges have been enough to prompt
several hundred
institutions, from Dartmouth and Cornell to the Universities
of Washington
and Arizona, to adopt the same tactic.
The federal
department of education is paying for a more comprehensive study
of the
effects of the strategy. And last month, as colleges prepared for
orientation — traditionally the heaviest party season on campus — an
umbrella group of 21 national higher-education associations issued a
statement asking its members and the news media to ban the phrase "binge
drinking," calling it inaccurate and counterproductive.
The new
campaigns have opened a bitter debate about the difference between
heavy
drinking and youthful experimentation. Those who first sounded the
alarm
about binge drinking dismiss the new campaigns as Pollyannaish and
doubt
statistics saying that students overestimate the amount they believe
their
peers drink. Marketing, they say, will only gloss over the problem.
Henry
Wechsler, a Harvard researcher, first called attention to the problem
of
binge drinking on campus in 1993, when he concluded that 44 percent of
students were binge drinking. Last month, he published a study disputing the
basis of the new campaigns and said that the figure for binge drinkers on
campus still held at 44 percent in 1999.
Richard P. Keeling, the
editor of the Journal of American College Health,
which published Dr.
Wechsler's latest study, called the new strategy "a
terribly hopeful
approach in a field which is despairing of hope. But
popularity is not proof
of effectiveness."
Among other public health and college officials,
though, the approach is
winning converts.
"It seemed too good to be
true," said William DeJong, director of the Higher
Education Center for
Alcohol and Other Drug Prevention, a federally financed
research center in
Newton, Mass. But success on a variety of campuses, he
said, "changed the
way I've come to think."
"We have a number of schools that have been
trying different things for a
long time and nothing seems to change that
much. Then they try this approach
and wham! Within two years they see a 20
percent drop in reported drinking.
That's worth paying attention
to."
Devotees call the campaigns "social norms" marketing, and in the
spirit of
Madison Avenue, speak of moderation as a product, aiming to sell
it to
students in much the way The Gap sold Americans on wearing khakis:
with sly
but pervasive messages suggesting that everyone else is doing it,
too.
"Zero to 3" read Frisbees handed out at Cornell, referring to the
number of
drinks most students drink when they party. "What's the norm?"
asks one side
of footballs at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva,
N.Y., with the
answer, "Four or Fewer," on the other. Posters blanket
bulletin boards and
student newspapers at these and other campuses
proclaiming the facts flatly:
2 of 3 students do not drink on the big party
nights; 55 percent of students
consume fewer than five drinks when they
drink.
The strategy was first suggested in 1986 by H. Wesley Perkins, a
professor of
sociology at Hobart, who noticed in surveys that students often
overestimated
how much their peers were drinking. The more they
overestimated, he said, the
more likely they were to drink heavily.
In the years since, several other studies have shown the same gap
between
perception and reality. One study of 48,000 students on 100 campuses
nationwide found that at campuses where most students said they drank once a
month, 90 percent presumed that their peers drank weekly or even daily.
At the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, random Breathalyzer
tests
given to about 2,000 students in 1997 found that 66 percent had no
alcohol in
their blood when they returned to their dormitory rooms on the
traditional
big party nights of Thursday, Friday and Saturday, despite what
even
administrators acknowledged was a reputation as a "party
school."
The myth of heavy drinking, the researchers say, takes root in
college
culture. Fraternities often assume the highest, or at least the
loudest,
profile on campus, even though in most cases, the majority of
students do not
belong to the Greek system. Campus chatter, too, revolves
around tales of
drunken evenings; as Professor Perkins asked, how often do
college students
sit around on Saturday morning and say "She was so sober
last night"?
The headlines about binge drinking only reinforced that
myth, the researchers
say. Dr. Wechsler defined binge drinkers as women who
consumed four drinks
and men who drank five over an unspecified period of
time at least once in
the previous two weeks.
"It's like the game of
telephone," said Professor Perkins. "Students think,
`Ooh, 40 percent of
people binge drink,' that becomes, `Ooh, most people
binge drink,' that
becomes, `Ooh, everybody binge drinks.' By talking about
the problem, we're
making it the norm."
Northern Illinois University was the first to try
the strategy. In 1989, the
university had tried a conventional campaign of
scare tactics, inviting
speakers to talk about the risks associated with
alcohol abuse, and bringing
a crashed car on campus. But the percentage of
students who said they drank
heavily actually rose slightly that year, to 45
percent from 43 percent the
previous year, and students perceived that 69
percent of their peers drank
heavily.
In 1990, the university changed
to a social-norms model, with posters and
advertisements featuring pictures
of attractive couples under the headline
"Most students drink five or fewer
drinks when they party." Heavy drinking
declined according to surveys of the
students, to 37 percent.
Perceptions of heavy drinking declined, too, to
57 percent in 1990 and have
continued to slide, to 33 percent in 1998.As
perceptions did, heavy drinking
did, too, to about 25 percent of all
students in 1998. Negative consequences
also declined: injuries to self
dropped from 29 percent in 1989 to 15
percent, injuries to others, from 20
percent to 5 percent.
Other campuses adopting the same campaign posted
similar results, prompting
still more colleges to sign on.
"These are
the best results that anything, short of a 24-hour lockdown, is
going to
produce," said Drew Hunter, the secretary of the task force on
college
drinking that opposes the term binge drinking. It includes the
American
Council on Education, the National Collegiate Athletic Association,
and 19
other higher education associations.
Initially, some college presidents
said they worried about the approach
because it seems to endorse moderate
drinking, when most college students are
under the legal drinking age of 21.
But supporters say the campaign is
value-neutral; it simply states the
facts.
Researchers on alcohol abuse objected to Dr. Wechsler's use of the
term binge
drinking from the start, said G. Alan Marlatt, director of the
Addictive
Behaviors Research Center at the University of Washington. In
traditional
research, he said, a drinking binge is an uncontrollable,
excessive episode
that lasts several days, making the drinker unable to
function normally at
work or in relationships.
Others objected to
the term because it did not define the period in which the
drinks were
consumed, or account for how much a student weighed or ate while
drinking.
"It created more problems, or at least confusion," said
Timothy C. Marchell,
director of substance abuse services at Cornell.
To Dr. Wechsler, though, the semantic disputes divert attention from the
real
problem, which is that too high a percentage of students — fall under
his
definition of binge drinking. "Getting rid of a word is not going to
solve
the situation with students appearing in emergency rooms or the noise
and
vomit and date rape and assaults and injuries," he said. "You can't
define
this out of existence."
Dr. Keeling, the editor of the journal
of college health, said the studies
produced on the social-norms approach,
some appearing in his publication,
only look at single campuses, so are not
representative of American colleges,
and should not be used to justify the
same approach everywhere.
"We would love to publish the defining study
that proves the value of this
approach," Dr. Keeling said, "But we just
haven't seen it."
For students, campaign has lightened the considerable
pressure to drink,
particularly among freshmen.
"Coming in, I was one
of those borderline people," said Angela Richardson,
20, a junior at Hobart
and William Smith. "I thought, `I want to socialize,
but is everyone going
to look at me if I don't drink?' This helps you realize
you don't have to
stand there with a drink in your hand."
She and other students on campus
initially questioned where the numbers came
from, and some still express
skepticism about them. Still, even the skeptics
say the students making
noise as they come home drunk from bars are in the
minority, a sign, college
administrators say, that the campaign is working.
"We're all trying our
hardest to be individuals," Ms. Richardson said. "But
the truth is, we want
to fit in. And just knowing you're in the majority
makes you feel a heck of
a lot better."
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