Alcohol Misrepresented

Alcohol Advertising and Underage Drinking Study Refuted

Study purporting to show that alcohol advertising causes young people to drink fails to do so. Its data actually show that higher exposure to alcohol ads was associated with less drinking among youths studied.

Another Alcohol Study of Women is Deceptive and Misleading

A 33% increase in alcohol consumption by young women in U.S. is based on a meaningless measure of alcohol consumption. Drinking hasn’t increased at all among that group, according to government studies.

Spring Break: False Statistics

Office of National Drug Control Policy admits it has no evidence to support its claim that 1 in 7 underage high school students is partying unsupervised during spring break at places like Cancun where they can binge drink and engage in promiscuous sex.

Alcohol Producers: Targeting Teens

The Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) insists that alcohol beverages are "targeted" to consumers under the age of 21, even after an exhaustive federal investigation has concluded that there is no evidence that alcohol products or their advertising are being targeted to those under the legal drinking age of 21.

Normalizing the Drinking of Alcohol

Normalizing alcohol... what exactly is normalizing alcohol and how is it harmful? Is abnormalizing alcohol more effective in reducing alcohol abuse and alcohol-related problems?

Public Health Leaders on Underage Drinking

Public health, education and law enforcement leaders incorrectly believe that alcohol consumption by young people is a serious and worsening problem in the US, according to a survey sponsored by Leadership to Keep Children Alcohol Free.

More Articles