Home Top Voted Top Viewed Tag Cloud Hot Pictures  
  Red Hot  
  Jokes  
  Bollywood Gossips  
  Hollywood Gossips  
  Funny Pictures  
  Amazing News  
  Interesting News  
  Life Style/ Health  
  Romantic Videos  
  Funny Videos  
  Women/Pregnancy/Kids  
  Breaking News  
  We Have All 4 u NEWSLETTER  
 
Sign up with email to receive our free newsletter.
 
     



TODAY'S POLL
  Rate Katrina Kaif Do you find him:  
     
  Cold  
  Hot  
  Sizzling  
     
   
     
5 R-rated films ‘propel’ underage kids to try booze
Posted on March 12, 2010 (http://spicezee.zeenews.com)
Vote Category : Interesting News | Tags : R-rated movies, booze, teen | Current Rating : 5/5.0 | Views : 190
Rate this Article :  Poor           Excellent 
Your rating help other readers to gauge the value of this article.


Washington: R-rated movies that glamorise violence and crime inspire children under 17 to try alcohol, a new study claims.

A total of 6,255 children were surveyed, every 8 months for two years from 2003 through 2005, to find the relationship between R-rated movies and the probability of alcohol use.

The link was established across different levels of “sensation seeking,” which are a tendency to seek out risky experiences.

James D Sargent, a pediatrician at Dartmouth Medical School, who conducted the study, said: "The study found that watching R-rated movies affected the level of sensation seeking among adolescents.

“It showed that R-rated movies not only contain scenes of alcohol use that prompt adolescents to drink, they also jack up the sensation seeking tendency, which makes adolescents more prone to engage in all sorts of risky behaviors.

"There is another take home point in the findings. When it comes to the direct effect on alcohol use, the influence of R-rated movies depends on sensation seeking level. High sensation seekers are already at high risk for use of alcohol, and watching a lot of R-rated movies raises their risk only a little. But for low sensation seekers, R-rated movies make a big difference. In fact, exposure to R-rated movies can make a low sensation seeking adolescent drink like a high sensation seeking adolescent."

The Dartmouth pediatrician explained that high sensation seeking adolescents go out on the street and engage in risky behaviors, hence movies don’t play a big role in their alcohol consumption.

Sensation seeking was based on how individual subjects identified with statements like: "I like to do scary things, I like to do dangerous things, I often think there is nothing to do, and I like to listen to loud music."

Sargent ended: "The message to parents is clear. Take the movie ratings literally. Under 17 should not be permitted to see R-rated movies."

The study has been published in the March issue of Prevention Science, a scientific journal of the Society for Prevention Research.



You may also interested in reading :