DHHS → MeCDC → Disease Prevention → Substance Abuse Prevention → For Communities → Count ME In → What can you do?
What can you do?
No matter who you are, there's something you can do to prevent underage drinking:
Parents:
- Educate yourself, your children, and others about the risks of underage drinking, and set clear and consistent expectations about not using alcohol before age 21
- Use the monitoring tips at - whenever possible, start these habits well before your children reach their teenage years
- Be careful about the messages you send about alcohol - use the modeling tips at
Youth:
- Take a stand and feel comfortable refusing alcohol, don't give in to peer pressure
- Be a good role model for younger siblings and others who look up to you
- Get involved in community efforts to reduce underage drinking - be part of the solution
Pediatricians and Other Health Care Providers:
- Educate your patients and their parents about the dangers of underage drinking
- Include screening for alcohol and other drug use in your standard practice when seeing teenagers
- Provide information to parents about prevention strategies, including the monitoring and modeling tips at
Schools:
- Implement evidence-based prevention substance abuse programs to educate students and their parents
- Identify and refer students using alcohol for appropriate interventions
- Consistently and fairly enforce school substance abuse policies
Law Enforcement:
- Adopt and implement a clear departmental underage drinking enforcement policy, like the fb88 Chiefs of Police/OSA model policy at /dhhs/population-health/prevention/lawenforcement
- Aggressively investigate and prosecute adults who provide or sell alcohol to minors
- Partner with others in your community to ensure a comprehensive multi-faceted approach to underage drinking prevention that does not rely on enforcement alone to solve the problem
Alcohol Retailers:
- Set a goal of zero sales to minors and then establish effective management practices to achieve it
- Sign on to the Youth Empowerment and Policy Group's "Alcohol Retailer's Local Marketing Code of Conduct" ( )
- Participate in Project Sticker Shock to educate adults who buy alcohol about the furnishing laws ( /dhhs/population-health/prevention/youth/sticker.htm )
Other Community Members:
- Join a local coalition that is working on underage drinking prevention ( /dhhs/population-health/prevention/communitycontacts.htm )
- Offer public support for prevention and enforcement efforts; thank retailers who do a good job
Be aware of the messages you send to young people you interact with - the modeling tips for parents at apply to all adults.