Category: Sosial

  • Children In Singapore Start Consuming Alcohol At Increasingly Younger Age

    Children In Singapore Start Consuming Alcohol At Increasingly Younger Age

    Ben had his first drink of whiskey and cola when he was 13 and in Secondary One. It was with a group of friends, after school at a staircase near his Redhill home.

    It was not a big deal, insists Ben (not his real name), now 18. “My older brother was already drinking and my father drank at home all the time,” he said.

    He is part of a new generation of teenagers who are beginning to drink younger, say social workers concerned about a trend they started noticing about four years ago.

    “In the past, most teenagers would start drinking at 15 or 16, but now we are seeing 12- or 13-year-olds,” said Dr Carol Balhetchet, senior director for youth services at the Singapore Children’s Society.

    One of the main reasons is a growing tolerance for social drinking. “Nowadays, it’s not uncommon for adults to drink socially in front of children,” said Dr Balhetchet.

    That was how a seven-year-old girl had her first drink.

    “The mother was drinking wine and left it unfinished on the table, the girl just went up and took a sip,” she said.

    Figures for alcohol abuse among youth are mostly anecdotal, with VWOs saying they deal with between five and 10 cases each year.

    The National Addictions Management Service (NAMS) deals with 10 to 15 cases of problem drinking among youth aged 19 or below each year.

    Dr Gomathinayagam Kandasami, a NAMS consultant and head of addiction medicine at the Institute of Mental Health, said that while some teenagers might miss classes because of a drinking binge or argue with their parents, they are unlikely to experience the serious loss in functioning long-time alcoholics grapple with.

    “Younger people may not experience the full range of alcohol-related problems,” he said.

    Many of them only get help for their drinking habits when the law catches up to them for other offences.

    For Ben, that was in 2012 when he stole a bottle of blackcurrant-flavoured vodka from a convenience store.

    “I hadn’t had a drink in two weeks and I couldn’t afford alcohol. I couldn’t control myself,” said Ben, who is from a single-parent family and currently serving national service. He was caught on the store’s CCTV cameras and arrested.

    The legal age for buying alcohol is 18, but younger people do not have difficulty getting their drinks, social workers said.

    “They can easily get older friends to buy drinks for them,” said Ms Lena Teo, assistant director of counselling at the Children-at-Risk Empowerment Association (Care Singapore). “Some buy rice wine from supermarkets, and easily say it is for their mothers to use in cooking.”

    Ms Sheena Jebal, principal counselling psychologist at NuLife Care and Counselling Services, said teenagers may pour the liquor into soft drink cans so they can drink undetected in public – under void decks and in parks. “I can say now every youth-at-risk would have experienced drinking at least once,” she said.

    The problem is worrying because many go on to more serious vices, she noted. “It’s thrill-seeking behaviour. One starts with smoking first, then drinking – and if they can smoke and drink and not get caught, they will move on to the next level,” she said, adding that some move on to drugs such as Ice and Ecstasy.

    This appears to corroborate Central Narcotics Bureau data which shows that drug addicts under 30 now make up two-thirds of new abusers.

    Mr Moses Huang, counselling therapist at Ain Society, said the common thread that unites young alcohol abusers tends to be parental neglect. “They can come from low-income families or the super rich. If parents don’t spend time with them to educate them about drinking, they can be easily influenced,” he added.

    The VWOs said a concerted effort is needed to address the problem – with education both in schools and in the home.

    The Liquor Control Bill – which bans public consumption of alcohol after 10.30pm, and is expected to come into force in April – will also help, said Ms Sheena.

    She said the ban is coming at the right time, and added: “If not, you would see more and more young people wasting their lives away drinking.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Chan Chun Sing: Build Social Cohesiveness Through Property Design

    Chan Chun Sing: Build Social Cohesiveness Through Property Design

    SINGAPORE: Building rental units next to new Build-to-Order flats and getting real estate students to also study social sciences – some of the ideas raised by Social and Family Development Minister Chan Chun Sing to have more social inclusiveness in Singapore.

    Mr Chan was speaking to 50 engineering and real estate students from the National University of Singapore (NUS) and Nanyang Technological University (NTU) at a dialogue on Wednesday (Feb 25).

    Homes today provide greater privacy – for instance, common corridors are no longer seen at newer blocks. Flat owners can have greater privacy this way, but it can have social implications, said Mr Chan.

    “In short, today’s privacy will be tomorrow’s social isolation,” said Mr Chan.

    “That common corridor doesn’t just serve a functional role to allow people to get from the lift lobby or staircase back to their house – it allows mixing, it allows people to get to know their neighbours, it allows people to walk past and greet each other,” he explained.

    “When we take away that in the name of privacy, then we have to ask ourselves the next design that we need to incorporate that will allow people to have privacy and at the same time, not create a situation where in 20 to 30 years’ time, we will have an aged population with a social problem.”

    Mr Chan said in fostering social interaction, those in the real estate industry have an important role. Developers could consider building different types of flats, including rental units, in a single project to bring together people of different social and economic status.

    “Perhaps it’s important, in our whole society, to have social mixing whereby the rich grow up understanding that there are poor people in this society, that we will count our blessings, that in this society it’s our responsibility for those who have been more blessed to extend a helping hand to the poor,” he said.

    Mr Chan added that in cases of the “not-in-my-backyard” syndrome, designers and architects can also help to mitigate the situation through careful design.

    But for the property sector to play that role well, those in the industry, and real estate students, need to have a good understanding of social needs. That is still lacking in the curriculum of some universities in Singapore, said Mr Chan.

    “If you want to be a good architect, a good real estate student, beyond architecture and real estate, you should really study sociology, demographics – you should study social sciences,” he said.

    When asked if the government will consider building HDB flats at prime locations such as downtown Marina to improve social interaction, Mr Chan said he is sceptical it would work, as there are other issues to consider.

    For instance, buyers can purchase HDB flats in prime areas at “artificially low prices”, only to flip them in the resale market and enjoy a windfall.

    “Who is cross-subsidising them? The Government? Actually the Government has no money to cross-subsidise,” he said. “The real answer is the rest of the people – the three-room flats and the four-room flats are cross-subsidising them. That comes to another point which is then, is this a fair system? So there are complex considerations on where we want to build.”

    Organisers of the dialogue, the Real Estate Developers’ Association of Singapore, said it hoped to foster a better understanding of the real estate environment amongst youths.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Proposal – NSFs Receiving Financial Aid From SAF To Be Automatically Referred To MSF After Service

    Proposal – NSFs Receiving Financial Aid From SAF To Be Automatically Referred To MSF After Service

    Less well-off national servicemen who receive financial aid from the Singapore Armed Forces may continue to receive help even after they have completed their full-time stints.

    Under a proposal by a feedback body to the Government on defence matters, these servicemen will not have to re-apply for financial assistance after their mandatory stints. Instead, they will be automatically referred to the Ministry of Social and Family Development, which will likely to pick up the tab to help them.

    This is one of the 18 proposals submitted by the Advisory Council for Community Relations in Defence (Accord) to the Defence Ministry on Wednesday.

    They include partnering women’s groups to organise small group information sharing sessions to improve the understanding of defence issues among women; notifying employers and firms earlier when their staff are called up for in-camp training; and grooming ambassadors to promote the SAF Volunteer Corps and encouraging more people to sign-up as volunteers.

    The proposals come six months after Accord, formed in 1984 to help shape the efforts of Mindef in getting the buy-in for defence and NS, was restructured into three separate councils to strengthen broader community support for defence and NS.

    Accord member Claire Chiang, who sits on the Family and Community Council, said the panel wanted to address the “life-cycle needs” of less well-off national servicemen who might face hardship after NS and might need financial help.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Girl Poses Nude At Carpark Entrance And Posts Photo On Tumblr

    Girl Poses Nude At Carpark Entrance And Posts Photo On Tumblr

    Stomper Xox was shocked to see a girl’s naked photo online, where she had posed naked in public — in front of a carpark entrance.

    According to the Stomper, she and her friend had spotted this posting on Tumblr.

    In the photo, the girl is standing in front of a carpark’s entrance, completely nude and holding up the “peace” sign.

     

    Source: http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg

  • 53 Year Old Female West Coast Resident Is Singapore’s First Dengue Death Victim This Year

    53 Year Old Female West Coast Resident Is Singapore’s First Dengue Death Victim This Year

    A 53-year-old woman has died from dengue at the National University Hospital (NUH), said the Ministry of Health (MOH) and the National Environment Agency (NEA) in a joint media release on Tuesday (Feb 24).

    This is the first reported dengue death in Singapore in 2015.

    The patient was a Chinese national who stayed at West Coast Road, MOH and NEA said. She was admitted to NUH on Monday and died on the same day.

    She was staying within an active dengue cluster with seven cases. NEA detected six counts of mosquito breeding since it started inspecting the area.

    Vector control operations to get rid of adult mosquitoes and any potential breeding habitats are ongoing, NEA said.

    “Over the past three weeks, there has been a dip in weekly dengue cases. Notwithstanding, we need to remain vigilant and continue to keep dengue cases in check as a large proportion of our population is still susceptible to dengue infection due to the lack of immunity,” MOH and NEA said.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

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