Category Archives: Children

Teen alcohol use

I wrote this as a comment to an article on Medfield.Patch.com this morning, and Patch told me it was way too long (“Easy there, Tolstoy. Your comment cannot exceed 1500 characters.”), so I have posted it here instead.

What I took away from the MCAP meeting last November, and from prior similar ones, was both the high incidence of binge drinking amongst the juniors and seniors at Medfield High School, but even more importantly, the research that clearly documents a direct correlation between the onset age at which alcohol use begins and the eventual rate of alcohol related problems later in life.  It is apparently both well researched and well documented that the earlier in one’s life that one starts to use alcohol, the more likely it is that one will have alcohol addiction problems later in life.   So every year we can get our kids to postpone alcohol use makes later addiction problems that much less likely for them.

Given that there is such a well documented cause and effect relationship between the earlier onset age of drinking and later increased alcohol related problems, and given too that those adverse results can be avoided by the current choices being made by our youth, it strikes me that we as a society should be doing whatever we can to assist our youth to:

  1. first, fully understand and appreciate the increased risk and the potential long term consequences of their present choices and actions surrounding drinking, and
  2. second, learn the strategies and gain the confidence to avoid current choices that have potential to start severe long term effects for such a significant number of them.

It was at a prior similar meeting that the speaker noted that they now know that the brain is not fully developed until we are about twenty-five years of age.  As a result, the effects of alcohol use by those younger brains differs from its effect on the fully developed brain.  One of those differences seems to be the greater susceptibility to addiction.  If we so clearly know both that fact and those risks, how can we as a society not try to influence our youth away from  behaviors that will cause then long term problems and greater grief.

I do not claim to know the answer as to how this gets done, but I do know that it is not enough to just say that we all drank when we were young, that the kids now will all continue to do it too, and as a result to do nothing.  There is just too much to lose to not try to make more of a difference.  I also know that society has been able to successfully change attitudes and behavior towards both smoking and seatbelt use during my lifetime, primarily by the education of our youth on the associated risks and consequences.  Now it is our children who chose not to smoke and chose to wear seatbelts, and in turn teach and shame we parents into following suit.  As a society, we cannot afford to risk the loss of one more of our youth to alcohol, so we must do something.

I posted at my blog, https://medfield02052.wordpress.com/,  the materials from that MCAP meeting last November, which can be found at https://medfield02052.wordpress.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=1158&action=edit&message=6&postpost=v2.

Arsenic in apple juice

FDA reconsidering limits on arsenic levels in juice.

The AP (11/30, Jalonick) reported that the Food and Drug Administration “is considering tightening restrictions for the levels of arsenic allowed in apple juice after consumer groups pushed the agency to crack down on the contaminant.” On Wednesday, FDA deputy commissioner for foods Michael Taylor said the agency has already begun increased testing and research on arsenic in apple and other juices, and is seriously weighing lowering the amount of arsenic allowed. A Consumer Reports study released Wednesday found that nine of 88 samples of apple juice from grocery stores exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency’s 10 parts per billion standard for drinking water. Consumer groups argue that FDA’s current “level of concern” standard for arsenic in apple juice of 23 parts per billion “is too high and isn’t enforced with enough urgency.” The Consumers Report study calls for reducing the levels to as low as 3 parts per billion.

Reuters (11/30, Keiper) added that the report’s findings were put online and will be featured in the January 2012 issue of Consumer Reports magazine

Janice D’Arcy wrote in a Washington Post (11/30) blog posting, “Given that arsenic can be organic and harmless, or inorganic and dangerous, perhaps the most troubling finding is that most of the arsenic found in the juice was inorganic.” She noted that Consumer Reports’ parent, Consumers Union, “is suggesting that parents restrict juice consumption to children up to 6 years old to no more than six ounces per day. For older children, it recommends no more than eight to 12 ounces a day.”

HealthDay (11/30, Gardner) reported that inorganic arsenic is “known to cause bladder, lung and skin cancer. It can also up the risk of heart disease and type 2 diabetes, and some reports have stated that arsenic exposure can affect brain development in children.”

Jeannine Stein wrote in a Los Angeles Times (11/30) blog posting that the Consumer Reports study “comes just months after television host Dr. Mehmet Oz proclaimed results from his own investigation showed that arsenic levels in apple juice were unhealthful. The Food and Drug Administration claimed Oz’s statistics were faulty and said juice was safe to drink. Apple juice contains a certain amount of organic arsenic, and what Oz found, they said, represented the total amount of arsenic and wasn’t an accurate reading.” It adds that, in light of the Consumer Report study, “Oz may feel vindicated.”

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5i0OVg-WttM8liDgcPJa1-FpP7lsA?docId=d85414935c0247e197c119d2deb1f580

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/on-parenting/post/consumer-reports-finds-alarming-levels-of-arsenic-in-apple-and-grape-juices/2011/11/30/gIQACVl1CO_blog.html

http://www.latimes.com/health/boostershots/la-heb-arsenic-apple-juice-consumer-reports-20111130,0,7800816.story

Town opts to postpone Halloween

The town opted this morning to postpone Medfield’s celebration of Halloween until Friday, because of the ongoing issues related to the storm.  I was told that the administrators, public safety and department heads were conferring and felt that prudence and safety should control.  There apparently continue to be downed and leaning tree limbs, downed wires, and widespread electrical outages.  The safety of the children has to be the the paramount underlying consideration, as we cannot afford even one unexpected event.  However. that does not avoid the fact that any such change is bound to inconvenience people  and their children, for which effects the town should be sorry.

Report on Unsafe Toys

Trial lawyers report on toy safety (www.justice.org/toys) good road map for what to watch out for: sharps joined by lead, toxins, & magnets

MHS Mentors available for girls in Blake and elementary schools

MHS students seek to mentor elementary & middle school girls – email medfieldyouthoutreach@yahoo.com to arrange a teen mentor