Should we give our kids alcohol sooner rather than later?
A new Aussie study says YES.
We’re not sure where letting children drink booze fits into permissive, authoritarian and authoritative [parenting styles](http://www.nowtolove.com.au/parenting/family/guilt-free-parenting-tips-31822 |target="_blank"|rel=”nofollow”), but a research team from the University of New South Wales (UNSW) are giving it a red-hot shot.
During their four-year-long study, researchers discovered that kids who were given alcohol by their parents were more likely to be drinking full serves by the time they were 15 or 16, but were far less likely to binge drink.
Analysing nearly 2,000 Year 7 students and their parents from Sydney, Perth and Tasmania over a four-year period, the researchers measured the teenagers’ consumption of whole drinks, their binge drinking (consuming four or more drinks in one sitting), as well as who supplied them with the alcohol: their parents, friends, or other adults.
The study found that when children were given alcohol from their parents, they were least likely to binge drink.
But what about the long-reported damages that alcohol can have on developing teenage brains? Lead author of this study, UNSW Professor Richard Mattick, says that giving children alcohol at an earlier age could be serve as a preventative measure of kids developing alcohol-related problems later in life.
“There is a body of research indicating the adolescent brain is still developing well into the early 20s and alcohol may interfere with optimum development," says Professor Mattick, a Principal NHMRC Research Fellow at the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, as reported by Medical Xpress.
"But also we know parents want to do the right thing by their children and there has been anecdotal evidence that children introduced to alcohol by their parents, as is common in some European cultures, may be less likely to develop problems with alcohol."
However, there is one result from the study Professor Mattick can’t ignore: that being given alcohol at an early age by the parents doubled a child’s likely hood of drinking than their peers.
"There may be later harms that are not yet obvious, and we are aware that early initiation of drinking is strongly associated with later alcohol use problems in adulthood – delay is the best strategy."
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