This special feature is dedicated to the harm children are exposed to when they grow up in households affected by parental alcohol problems.

Protecting the Health and Rights of Children of Households with Alcohol Problems

That children have to grow up in homes affected by parental alcohol problems is an invisible and silent crisis – worldwide. As carers are affected by alcohol problems, they cannot provide shelter and often basic support, and also society is failing to protect and promote the health and rights of children of households with alcohol problems. 

  • In the United States, more than 10% of children grow up in a household with alcohol problems.
  • In Europe, 9 million children grow up in households with alcohol problems.
  • In Australia, ca. 1 million children live in households with at least one adult experiencing alcohol use disorder.

Evidence shows that even “normal” levels of parental alcohol use might trigger children to develop anxiety and/or depression in adolescence and early adulthood. Kids may be more likely to develop depression and anxiety when their parents are regular alcohol users, even when neither parent consumes so much alcohol to be considered having an alcohol use disorder. 

The WHO, UNODC and UNESCO list a number of risk factors for child health on the family level:

  • parental substance use,
  • parental mental ill-health,
  • parental abuse and neglect, and
  • material poverty.

The WHO, UNODC and UNESCO list a number of risk factors for child health on the community level:

  • easy and wide availability of alcohol and other drugs,
  • social norms permissive to substance use and detrimental to academic achievement, and
  • lack of positive contact with other adults.

Alcohol fuels all these risk factors.

Brand new material

Download the brand new booklet: “No Child Left Behind: Protecting the Health and Rights of Children of Households with Alcohol Problems” (PDF).

It contains original artwork and a comprehensive overview of the harms children of households with alcohol problems are exposed to.


Source Website: Alcohol Issues Newsletter - No. 04