National Drug Council Cayman Islands

Trends in Alcohol Use by Students

What are the facts? Have trends changed in recent years? Does Binge drinking really exist? At what age is alcohol first used? As a parent, what should I recognize?

Alcohol remained the most reported common drug used by adolescents in the Cayman Islands according to the Student Drug Use Surveys of 2012 a survey carried out on middle and high school students in the Cayman Islands.

Cayman Islands Student Drug Use Survey 2012 indicates;

  • About six of every ten students (60.6%) reported that they had an alcoholic beverage at some time in their life.
  • A quarter of students (25.8%) reported drinking alcohol only on social events
  • Almost a quarter of students (22.8%) used alcohol for the first time at some point during the year prior to the survey.
  • The mean age of first use overall for alcoholic beverages was 12 years of age.
  • Not many students felt that drinking alcoholic beverages ‘sometimes’ was very harmful.
  • Of those students that use alcohol, 19.5% reported getting it from friends while a high proportion (18.0%), reported drinking at other social events.
  • The majority (58.9%) of students reported that it was ‘easy’ or ‘very easy’ to obtain alcohol.
  • Overall, 16.0% of students indicated binge drinking (14.8% of males and 16.8% of females).
  • About one of every six students (14.7%) reported that they were introduced to alcohol by a friend.

Students were also asked how they usually get their alcohol. Of those who drank alcohol, about 19.5% reported they got it from friends, 13.0% got it from parents, 9.4% got it from other relatives, 8.1% by “other” ways, 7.4% from buying it in the shop, 5.0% from brother/sister, and the remaining 1.4% obtained it from street dealers.

Are these findings relevant?

The CISDUS employs a complete census of students enrolled in grades 7 to 12. In 2012, 2,928 students in all private and public schools were asked to complete anonymous, self-administered questionnaire. The CISDUS report primarily emphasizes the prevalence of substance use, i.e., the percentage of students who report using a given drug during the 12 months before the survey. It is important to note that prevalence does not imply regular, frequent or problematic use, but it is an important first-order epidemiological indicator of the size of the population that has at minimum, tried a substance.

What should I recognize as a parent?

  • What are the indicators parents should look for?
  • Does gender, race, grade, ethnicity play a part in alcohol use?
  • How can parents get informed?

National Drug facts week (NDFW) is a health observance week for teens that aims to shatter the myths about drugs and drug abuse. Through community based-events and activities NDC works along with its partners to encourage teens to get factual answers from scientific experts about drugs and drug abuse.

The survey indicated that about 60.6% of all students surveyed reported lifetime use which did not significantly vary by gender (59.3% of males vs. 62.4% of females); however, females are reported more likely to use alcohol. The survey further indicates more than half (53%) of all students reported no substance abuse at all in 2012.