
Addiction Medicine Made Easy | Fighting back against addiction What I Told a Room Full of High School Seniors About College Party Culture
I sat down with a room full of high school seniors to talk to them about party culture in college.
College freedom can be thrilling—and unforgiving. As an ER physician turned addiction specialist, I pull back the curtain on campus party culture with real stories, clear limits, and life-saving tactics to be used the first weekend of college. From Narcan basics and Good Samaritan protections to the truth about binge drinking, this conversation lays out what actually keeps college students safe when nights get loud and fast.
We start with the numbers: what high-risk drinking is, why “I can hold my liquor” isn’t a flex but a warning sign, and how body size and sex change BAC more than most people realize. Then we walk through the pressure cookers—Greek life hazing, pre-gaming, shotgunning beers, beer bongs, keg stands, and jungle juice—explaining why compressing 10 drinks into an hour is the exact scenario that leads to blackouts, injuries, and assaults. I teach simple, effective steps: eat first, alternate drinks with water, stick with sealed beverages you open yourself, and never leave your cup behind. We talk candidly about consent, spiked drinks, and why half of campus sexual assaults involve alcohol.
The episode also tackles cannabis in 2026: today’s THC is a different drug than what parents remember. We unpack potency, “greening out,” rising rates of cannabis-induced paranoia and psychosis, and how frequent use intersects with attention, grades, and graduation. Along the way, I share ER-tested guidance for handling alcohol poisoning—when to observe, when to call 911, and how to position someone safely—as well as how to spot early signs of alcohol addiction in college students and get help through campus health services.
If you’re a senior heading to college, a parent, or a mentor, this is a clear-eyed playbook for staying safe without sitting out. Subscribe, share this with a student you care about, and leave a quick review—it helps more people find practical, judgment-free advice when they need it most.
To contact Dr. Grover: ammadeeasy@fastmail.com
