NEW YORK - Doctors
know that drinking, drugs and risky sex go together in young people - and a new
study suggests loud music should be added to that list.
In the report from The Netherlands, researchers
found that teens and young adults who spent a lot of time listening to loud
music - already risky because of the long-term chance of hearing loss - were
also more likely to smoke marijuana, binge drink and have sex without a condom.
"I think they've really shown that sex and
drugs go with rock and roll," said Dr. Sharon Levy, head of the Adolescent
Substance Abuse Program at Boston Children's Hospital who wasn't involved in
the new study
But, Levy said, it's far too early to warn parents
that listening to loud music could lead to drug or alcohol use.
The study couldn't show that one type of risky
behavior led to the other, she pointed out. And it didn't answer another
important question: what type of music, exactly, were study participants
listening to?
Researchers led by Ineke Vogel at Erasmus MC
University Medical Center in Rotterdam surveyed 944 students from inner-city
vocational schools, aged 15 to 25, about their music-listening habits and other
typical behavior.
They assessed "music-listening dose" by
asking students how much time they spent listening to tunes on their MP3
players or at a club or concert and estimating how loud that music typically
was for each participant.
The researchers then divided the students into
those exposed or not exposed to risky music levels, based on a cut-off defined
as one hour per day of music at 89 decibels - about as loud as a lawnmower - or
the equivalent.
According to that definition, about one-third of
the participants were risky MP3-player listeners and close to half were exposed
to music at risky levels at clubs and concerts.
Young people who often listed to loud music on MP3
players were twice as likely to have used pot in the last month, compared to
non-risky music listeners, the research team reported in Pediatrics on Monday.
And those who were frequently exposed to music at
clubs and concerts were six times more likely than people who weren't to binge
drink and twice as likely to have risky sex with inconsistent condom use. Club-
and concert-goers also happened to be less likely to smoke pot than other
youths.
"We know that high-risk behaviors certainly
run together, so in some ways it's not a big surprise," Levy told Reuters
Health.
The study can't say anything about whether
listening to MP3 players makes people feel like smoking marijuana - or vice
versa, she said.
And a more critical question, Levy said, is whether
young people are listening to music that glorifies risky behavior and making
decisions about drinking, drugs or sex based on that.
"That's a really important question: is what
they're hearing changing their behavior? That becomes important for
parents."
The Dutch researchers conclude that further
research into risky health behaviors should take loud music listening into
account, and interventions to prevent unsafe practices could target loud-music
venues, like nightclubs, for maximum effect.
The current data, Levy said, shouldn't change
anything about the way doctors treat their patients or how parents see their
kids' music-listening, however.
"It's really an important reminder that these
risk behaviors, they really go together," she said. But, "I don't
think that we're at the point that we should say, 'Boy, you should really cut
down MP3 player use' - we should because of the hearing loss, but I don't think
there's any evidence that's going to affect other risky behaviors at this
point."
Reuters
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