NEW RESEARCH SHOWS that alcohol affects a developing teen brain differently than an adult brain. “The brain goes through dynamic changes during adolescence, and alcohol can seriously damage longand short-term growth processes” (American Medical Association, 2003). Alcohol use may impair memory, learning, decision making and impulse control, and it greatly increases the risk of addiction. In addition, alcohol use can cause young people to develop social problems, have poor judgment, get into trouble, do poorly in school and experience failure in achieving lifelong goals. To compound this problem, research shows that parents generally underestimate the extent of teen drinking and its negative consequences. Thirty-one percent of youths who said they had been drunk in the past year were said by their parents to be non-drinkers. Others may view underage drinking as inevitable, but it isn’t. To be alcohol-free, a teen needs the active involvement and help of a parent. All children need help from their parents to guide them through their teenage years. Staying bonded to parents is critical to the process of teenagers emerging healthy, safe and alcohol-free.

