Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Alcohol
- Credit: Source: Wikimedia/Entheta
Health
alcohol poisoning
binge drinking
change the social norm
children
children hospitalized for alcohol abuse
doctors
drinking age limit
Eindhoven
law
Nico van der Ley
no change in alcohol usage amongst teenagers and parents
pediatricians
young people
Zwolle
Tuesday, 27 May 2014 - 12:03

Share this article:

Alcohol poisoning up amongst youth

Doctors are not noticing a difference between how parents and young people are handling their alcohol intake. Last year, the number of young people who ended up unconscious or in hospital due to alcohol stayed relatively the same. In the first quarter of 2014, doctors have also not noticed a difference. "The law has changed, but our social norm about alcohol hasn't yet", pediatrician Nico van der Ley tells the NOS. Last year, 713 children were hospitalized for alcohol poisoning. The year before that, 706 children. The average age at which children are binge drinking to the extent of needing to be hospitalized stays at 15.5. The youngest patients were 12 years old. A light drop in these figures happened in 2012, for the first time in years. This trend did not, however, last. "Of course I had also hoped that the drop would continue. But with the raising of the age limit on the horizon, young people in the age group of 16, 17, and 18 years still pulled a spurt under the mask of 'it's still allowed now'", says the pediatrician. Van der Ley does not expect a change this year yet. He says that the social norm has to change. Eindhoven and Zwolle seem to be the only places in the Netherlands where fewer children were hospitalized. "In regions where there is active cooperation, you see that this has a real effect. But the penny still hasn't dropped with many parents and guardians", Van der Ley emphasizes. Van der Ley says that it will simply take time, but that the signs of change are starting to bubble to the surface. "In the last time I have spoken to several parents who took other parents to court because their child was allowed to drink so much there. That never happened up to now."

More like this

Image
Ambulance in Rotterdam, Netherlands
One killed in Nijmegen fireworks accident just after midnight on New Year's
Image
Police officers in the Netherlands look out at a group of people on the street as fireworks explode over their head just after midnight on New Year's Day.
Zwolle joins 19 Dutch municipalities banning fireworks as national ban nears
Image
Student room
Student room prices up 6%; Amsterdam quickly approaching €1,000 per month
Image
Three intercity trains at Groningen Central Station
NS to run longer trains more frequently this King’s Day
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Dutch variable energy bills to rise more than 10% in some cases starting July 1
  • Roadside breakdowns jump 10% over hot weekend; More expected this week
  • Video: Rotterdam celebrates after Cape Verde plays Uruguay to 0-0 World Cup draw
  • Rotterdam money laundering case linked to famous British gold heist
  • Instagram sued over illegal gambling ads featuring Virgil Van Dijk, Ronaldo

Top stories

  • More international students facing housing issues in Netherlands, from bedbugs to fraud
  • Woman, 42, drowns in Waal after rescuing children from water
  • Average Netherlands home price rose by 4.4% to €487,383 in May
  • Video: Explosion damages Amsterdam-Oost apartment building; Two teens on fatbike sought
  • KNMI ends code orange overnight, warns of storms and 27–32°C heat Sunday and Monday

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content