Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Teen alcohol abuse statistics



Teen alcohol abuse statistics


Summary

Alcohol or 'booze' is widely used by teenagers. Binge drinking, drink driving and unsafe sex can all result from the misuse of alcohol. Alcohol is responsible for most drug-related deaths in the teenage population.
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Alcohol is tolerated as a socially acceptable drug, yet it is responsible for most drug-related deaths in the teenage population. Alcohol is also associated with a variety of serious health risks. It’s difficult to prevent teenagers from experimenting with alcohol, but parents can encourage sensible drinking habits.

The safest level of drinking for teenagers is no drinking, especially for young people under 15 years of age. If older teenagers do drink, parents can minimise the risks by providing adult supervision


Alcohol – the risks

Irresponsible use of alcohol can lead to:
  • Binge drinking or drinking too much on a single occasion
  • Drink driving
  • Unsafe sex
  • Impaired brain development
  • Injury or death.
Binge or heavy drinking

Binge drinking is the term commonly used to describe drinking heavily over a short period of time with the intention of becoming intoxicated. This can be very harmful to a person’s health and wellbeing. As well as increasing the risk of health problems, this can lead young people to take risks and put themselves in dangerous situations.
Common effects of binge episodes include:
  • Hangovers
  • Headaches
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Shakiness.



Alcohol and sex

Alcohol impairs judgement. Teenagers are more likely to engage in unsafe sexual practices when they have been drinking.
Other associated risks include:
  • Date rape
  • Sexual intercourse without a condom
  • Exposure to sexually transmissible infections (STIs)
  • Possible pregnancy.
Impaired brain development

Alcohol is a neurotoxin, which means it can poison the brain. One of the effects of excessive alcohol use is that it interferes with vitamin B absorption, which prevents the brain from working properly. Long-term drinking above the recommended levels may lead to a range of disorders, collectively known as alcohol-related brain injury (ARBI). Symptoms can include learning and memory problems and difficulties with balance.
Alcohol and other drugs
. Taking alcohol with other drugs that also suppress the central nervous system, such as heroin and benzodiazepines, can be particularly risky. It can cause a person’s breathing and heart rate to decrease to dangerous levels and increase the risk of overdose. The combination of alcohol and drugs (including cannabis) can also lead to increased risk taking, making it difficult to drive or carry out other activities, with the potential to harm others as well as the drinker.
Some factors that can prevent alcohol abuse

According to the text research, there are many important factors that help reduce the likelihood of a young person abusing alcohol. As well as good parental role modelling, these factors include:
  • A loving, supportive home life
  • Educational programs in schools on the use and misuse of alcohol
  • Developing personal, social, academic and employment skills
  • A healthy lifestyle, such as regular exercise and a love of sports
  • Restrictions on alcohol advertising
  • Avoiding the use of scare tactics, which can backfire and increase alcohol use among teenagers.

480 words app.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

presentacion

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1849ffMJbZX38qUnhmBBRyotAXXDUpKR2w-7X3CuPbZM/edit?usp=sharing

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

andrew lane interview

I remember buying the first Sherlock Holmes novel — ‘A Study in Scarlet’ — at a Church jumble sale in East London when I was about 12 years old. I became hooked on Arthur Conan Doyle’s stories straight away, and I got as many of his books as I could out of my local library, and then started buying them. What I can’t remember now is why I bought the book. I must have known something about Sherlock Holmes already, and wanted to find out more, but I don’t know where that initial impulse came from.
What does your Sherlock collection contain? Do have any memorabilia items?


Mostly I collect works of fiction which use Sherlock Holmes as a character, and I have several hundred of those, but I also have a sideline in collecting books of literary criticism which analyse the Sherlock Holmes stories. The ones that especially interest me are the ones which assume that Sherlock Holmes is in some sense a real person and then try to work out whether he went to Cambridge or Oxford University by analysing the attendance records between 1860 and 1880 looking for someone with the surname “Holmes”.
There are some criticism by conservative fans, what is your opinion about it? Is there anything you would like to tell them?
I understand the criticisms by conservative fans, and if someone else was writing this series then I would probably feel the same way. The
problem with conservative fans is that they want everything to be exactly the same as it was when Conan Doyle was writing, but the world and fictional styles have moved on. I would point out to them, however, that I am trying desperately not to contradict anything that Conan Doyle did, and that I am attempting to explain how Sherlock Holmes came to develop all of those skills that Conan Doyle told us he had – the boxing, the fencing, the martial arts, the chemistry, the violin playing… It stands to reason that Sherlock Holmes had to learn those things somewhere, and, more importantly, he had to have a reason for learning them all. Conservative Sherlockians tend to assume that Sherlock Holmes was either never a child or that he was like the adult version when he was a child. I just can’t see how that can be true.
ACTIVITIES
 


1.- Answer the following questions

1.- How did Andrew became hooked on Sherlock Holmes stories?  because one day he buy one book of sherlock holmesand he love it.
2.- Was Sherlock Holmes a real person? He search for 20 years and he doesent find any people of sername holmes
3.- Why has Andrew been criticized by some of Arthur Conan Doyle’s fans? Becausethey think that was a copy but in this version is supossed that sherlcok was a real kid.



 

 

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Monday, March 18, 2013

Choosing the best holidays

1-      The holidays i will choose is the P&O Crusies.
2-      I choose the cruiser because I all ready go in a cruiser to brasil and I like it very much,
So to visit other part of the world at the same experience can be a very good vacations.
3-      Finally, I can not go in vacation with only one person because in my family we are 6,
So I can’t go with a friend because I don’t have the age to go alone in a crusier.