youth
Alcohol Rehab Must be Made a Priority for America’s Youth
A recent study by the National Epidemiological Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions found that if drinking begins before the age of 15, the young person is four times more likely to become an alcoholic than if he hadn’t started drinking until he was 21 or older. As more kids turn to drinking, and turn into alcoholics as they get older, alcohol rehab centers could have a tough time meeting demand.
In the 1960s and 1970s, many states lowered the legal drinking age to 18 years old. A review of data since that time reveals an increase in alcohol related traffic deaths. This prompted advocacy groups to push for the legal drinking age to be raised again to 21 years old. By the mid to late 1980s, all states had adopted the same legal drinking age and alcohol related traffic fatalities dropped.
2 Different Types of Youth Drug Intervention
Let’s play out a quick scenario. If the scenario closely resembles your situation, then you will find the information that will follow very helpful.
Okay, so your 16 year old son is exhibiting signs of drug abuse. He is frequently absent from school, has a horribly rotten attitude and a nasty disrespect for any kind of authority. He runs away from time to time and has frequent interactions with police. His drug use is very obvious and it almost seems as if he doesn’t want to be the way he is but just does not know how to be any other way.
Occasionally he will have a break down and express a sincere desire to get better. From time to time he will make an effort to get his life back on track; however, it is always short lived and followed with another spree.
What The Students Say – Partial Results From The Woodbury Reports Parent/Student Survey
For the past few years, parents and former students of private, parent-choice, residential schools and programs have voluntarily submitted surveys to Woodbury Reports, Inc. These schools and programs are specifically designed to meet the special needs of their students. To date, we have received 404 completed surveys, 52 (13%) of them were from people who had personally attended one of these residential schools or programs.
With the accusations floating around that these schools and programs are harmful, abusive and only in it for the money, the former students who answer the survey questions provide information that shows how they personally view their program experiences. Though the surveys from the 52 former students gives some hint as to what kind of experience these students had, it is still only a small sample of the thousands of students who have attended one or more of these programs over the years.
Steroids in Youth Sports
It used to be that kids would join little league teams excited to play baseball, football and hockey. Young boys all over the country had dreams of being the next Mickey Mantle or Roger Staubauch. These days, as kids innocently join teams ready to begin their dream of becoming a professional in their chosen sport, and as parents cheer from the stands hoping that their little one doesn’t get hurt, the pressure to be bigger, faster and stronger than the other guy gets harder to ignore.
With professional sports contracts paying out millions of dollars for each player every year, a kid’s dreams can bring him fame and a pretty big fortune. But only if he is successful at beating out every other kid with the same dream. Out of the 1,500 or so active professional football players, there are maybe millions of kids who dream of being a great pro quarterback. With those odds, kids, sometimes coaches, and sometimes even parents begin looking for an edge for their child. Even though they are illegal to use more and more kids are turning to steroids to give them the edge they are looking for.




