The researchers worked with 329 children and their parents, who were involved in a family study in the Netherlands. On three home visits in 2015, 2016, and 2017, the children completed a visual task on tablet computers. The task involved matching individuals depicted in family situations where alcohol might be consumed (e.g., dinner, party, watching TV, camping) with one of 12 beverages (four alcoholic, eight non-alcoholic). The children’s parents completed surveys on their recent alcohol use, including how often they drank alcohol in the situations featured in the visual test. The researchers used statistical analysis to explore how exposure to mothers’ and fathers’ drinking influenced how children attributed alcohol use to adults.
Fathers were more likely than mothers to report drinking in situations that exposed children to alcohol (e.g., at restaurants), and in the visual test, children attributed alcohol to men more frequently than to women. Children more often exposed to their parents’ drinking were more likely to provide adults in the illustrations with alcoholic beverages, compared to children less frequently exposed. When mothers consumed alcohol around children, children more often attributed alcohol consumption to women generally, including female friends and grandmothers. When fathers consumed alcohol around children, children were more likely to attribute alcohol consumption to fathers specifically. This is perhaps because fathers’ drinking is more common than mothers’, and opportunities for mothers to drink around children are relatively scarce. Mothers’ alcohol use, then, may have different implications for children than fathers’ use. Exposure to mothers’ drinking did not affect the children’s provision of alcohol to men in the illustrations, and vice versa.
The findings add to the growing evidence of young children’s perceptions, knowledge, and awareness of alcohol well before they first consume it, with major implications for their future drinking. The study suggests that parental drinking is a key source of young children’s perceptions of alcohol norms, with parents operating as role models. The gender-specific exposure may be an early stepping-stone toward gendered drinking identities and patterns among adults. The researchers recommend making parents and caregivers aware — without admonishment — of the association between adult drinking and children’s perceived norms. Additional research is needed to explore the influence of exposure to parents’ drinking in diverse family structures, drinking cultures, and patterns of alcohol consumption.
Intergenerational alcohol exposure on young children’s normative perceptions — The association between exposure to mother’s and father’s alcohol use and children’s normative perceptions. M. Cook, K. Smit, C. Voogt, S. Kuntsche, E. Kuntsche. (pp xxx)
ACER-22-5273.R2