Study: Campaign fails to curb college drinking

A new report says that attempts to curb binge drinking on campuses through so-called “social norms marketing” — campaigns that trumpet evidence students at a given school party in moderation — have failed.

The report released Wednesday by the Harvard School of Public Health College Alcohol Study also found that alcohol abuse — by a few measures — increased at some campuses that employ social norms campaigns. A proponent of the marketing efforts immediately took issue with the findings.

Social norms marketing blankets campuses with posters and fliers that promote moderation by reinforcing evidence that students who drink to excess are the exception, not the rule. The idea is to help students who drink to fit in feel less peer pressure.

A poster with the slogan: “Most students at (name of the college) have five or fewer drinks when they party,” is an example of the marketing style, the report said.

Many colleges, including Kansas University, have adopted the campaigns since the mid-1990s, subsidized by alcohol manufacturers and various government agencies which have spent $8 million on the campaigns nationwide, the study said.

Social norms marketing “looks great and it’s not expensive to do,” said Henry Wechsler, the director of the Harvard study. “The only problem is that it doesn’t seem to work. It’s a feel good program.”

The report surveyed drinking patterns on 98 campuses, 37 of which have used social norms programs for one year. It measured for alcohol abuse in seven different ways, such as having 20 or more drinks in the past month and drinking 10 or more times in the past month. But no improvement in habits was found on social norms campuses by any of the measures, the study said.

Wechsler said the marketing fails because students on campuses are influenced more by small group pressure than large marketing campaigns.

“On a large campus with 30,000 students who do you relate to?” Wechsler asked. “It’s the people in your dorm or your fraternity or your friends. You don’t care what the other 30,000 people are doing.”

An alternative, he said, is for states and municipalities to crack down on low-priced alcohol specials offered by off-campus bars and liquor stores.

The man credited with starting the social norms movement in the 1980s took exception to Wechsler’s findings.

“The case studies we’ve seen are finding a 20 percent reduction in the high-risk college drinking rate” over two year periods, said H. Wesley Perkins, a sociology professor at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, N.Y.

Perkins called the report the latest in a series of efforts by Wechsler to discredit social norms marketing.

Wechsler defended the scientific validity of the study, citing its acceptance for publication in the July issue of the Journal of Studies on Alcohol.