Alcohol & Young People: Further Reading 1. White, V, Hayman J 2006. Australian secondary school students’ use of alcohol in 2005, Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing and The Cancer Council Victoria. 2. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2008. 2007 National Drug Strategy Household Survey: first results. Drug Statistics Series number 20.Cat. no. PHE 98. Canberra: AIHW, Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. 3. Chikritzhs T, Stockwell T, Heale P, Dietze, P, Webb M 2004. Under-aged drinking and related harms in Australia. National Alcohol Indicators, Bulletin No.7. Perth: National Drug Research Institute, Curtin University. 4. Perkins WH 2002. Social norms and prevention of alcohol misuse in college contexts. J Stud Alcohol, S14. 5. Weschler H, Eun Lee J, Kuo M, Seibring M, Nelson TF, Lee H 2002. Trends in college binge drinking during a period of increased prevention efforts: Findings from the Harvard School of Public Health study surveys, 1993-2001. Journal of Amercian College Health, 50(5):203-217 6. Weschler H, Moeykens B, Davenport A, Castillo S, Hansen J 1995. The adverse impact of heavy episodic drinkers on other college students. Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 56(6): 628-634. 7. Weschler H, Davenport A, Dowdall G, Moeykens B, Castillo S 1994. Health & behavioural consequences of binge drinking in college: a national survey of students at 140 campuses. JAMA, 272(21):1672-1677. 8. Jernigan D 2007. The need for restraint. Addiction, 102(11): 1747-1748. 9. Smith A, Edwards C, Harris W 2005. Bottleshops and ‘ready-to-drink’ alcoholic beverages. Health Promotion Journal of Australia 16(1): 32-36. 10. Hemphill SA, Munro G, Oh S 2007. Adolescents’ expenditure on alcohol: A pilot study. Australian Journal of Social Issues 42(4): 623(14). 11. CHOICE 2007. Alcopops, (http://www.choice.com.au). 12. Copeland J, Stevenson RJ, Gates P, Pillon P 2007. Young Australians and alcohol: The acceptability of ready-to-drink (RTD) alcoholic beverages among 12-30-year-olds. Addiction 102(11): 1740-1746. 13. Ferreira SE, de Mello MT, Pompeia` S, de Souza-Formigoni ML 2006. Effects of energy drink ingestion on alcohol intoxication. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research 30(4): 598–605. 14. Marczinski CA, Fillmore MT 2006. Clubgoers and Their Trendy Cocktails: Implications of Mixing Caffeine Into Alcohol on Information Processing and Subjective Reports of Intoxication. Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology 14(4): 450-458. 15. MacDonald B 2007. Red Bull, alcohol and drugs ‘can spark violence’. Irish Independent. Dublin. 16. Simmon M, Mosher J 2007. Alcohol, energy drinks, and youth: A dangerous mix. Marin Institute. Contact Us: Action on Alcohol Marketing (ALC3) Centre for Health Initiatives University of Wollongong Ph: (+61 2) 4221 5106 Fax: (+61 2) 4221 3370 Email: chi_research@uow.edu.au