Source: Irish Times Contact: 14 Aug 1997 Group calls for study of youth drinking By Marie O'Halloran The National Youth Council of Ireland has called on the Department of Health to conduct a full study and investigation of the consumption of alcohol, especially alcopops, by young people. The NYCI said the restrictions on the advertisement and sale of alcopops should be accompanied by greater Government support for education campaigns about the use and abuse of alcohol. "While we strongly suspect that alcopops are creating problems with alcohol abuse among young people, some questions surrounding them must be answered definitively," said Ms Jillian Hassett, president of the NYCI. "The extent of consumption of alcopops among young people needs to be properly ascertained. We also need to know who is drinking alcopops, in what quantities they are being drunk and where they are being bought." The Minister of State for Enterprise, Mr Tom Kitt, said last week he planned to introduce a code of practice to prevent the marketing of the beverages to underage drinkers. In addition a number of supermarket chains have decided to stop selling alcopops, the alcohol drinks with a sweet taste and "youthoriented packaging". RTE has also decided that it will no longer carry alcopop advertisements. These restrictions in Ireland follow a crackdown on alcopop sales by the British government last month. The NYCI's press officer, Mr Eamonn Waters, said that once the drug problem in Ireland came to the fore people no longer looked on alcohol as such a serious problem. Alcohol was now back on the agenda and a succession of Government Ministers had expressed their concern. © Copyright: The Irish Times