Ouders
hebben wel degelijk invloed op alcohol- en druggebruik van kinderen.*
Uit een Amerikaanse studie onder ruim 4.000 tieners in de leeftijd van 12 tot 18 jaar blijkt dat er degelijk wel invloed is van ouders op het gebruik van alcohol, sigaretten, soft- en harddrugs. Het zijn dus niet alleen de vrienden die dat beïnvloeden. Kinderen van ouders -die praten met en niet tegen hun kinderen en weten wie de vrienden zijn, waar ze naar toe gaan, wat ze gaan doen, welke volwassenen aanwezig zijn en wanneer ze weer thuis zijn- gebruiken duidelijk minder en minder vaak deze verslavende middelen. Ook bleek dat broers of zussen een duidelijke voorbeeldfunctie vervullen.
Parents
– not just peers – still matter in teens' choice to use drugs, BYU study
finds
Although most research into
teen drug prevention emphasizes peer pressure, a new study by a pair of Brigham
Young University sociologists shows that parents still maintain a significant
role in teens' choices to use or not use drugs.
"Much of the previous research in this area shows that adolescents make
their decisions about drugs based on influence from their friends," said
Stephen Bahr, professor of sociology at BYU and the study's lead author. "But
those studies neglect the notion we found here, that some of the family
characteristics help determine who teens associate with. We also found that some
steps taken by parents had a direct effect on lowering drug abuse, even in the
face of peer influences."
The findings, to be published this week in the new issue of the "Journal of
Primary Prevention," held true across drug type – alcohol, cigarettes,
marijuana and "hard" drugs like heroin and ecstasy.
"The fact that parents can make a difference in peer choices, or even after
those peer choices are made, is an important message to get out there,"
said study co-author John Hoffmann, also a BYU professor of sociology. "Parents,
you shouldn't throw up your hands, even if you find out your kids are starting
to hang around with kids who use drugs."
The researchers, assisted by Xiaoyan Yang, then a BYU graduate student,
conducted anonymous, random surveys of more than 4,000 seventh- through twelfth-
graders from all over Utah. The results showed that within the previous 30 days,
21 percent of the respondents reported drinking alcohol, 12 percent had engaged
in binge drinking, 9 percent had smoked marijuana and 12.5 percent took hard
drugs.
Further statistical analysis revealed that the influence of peers is strong, but
it is mediated by characteristics of parents, Bahr said.
"There are some who have even argued that parents don't have influence on
those decisions, that kids are independent in deciding who they're going to be
friends with," Hoffmann said. "We're arguing that's not true. Parents
do have influence over who their kids are friends with, and they can directly
influence that by monitoring activity more closely."
The study found other actions parents took that had significant effects on drug
use in addition to acting as gatekeepers over friends:
-- For each degree of tolerance toward marijuana that teens perceive in their
parents (measured on a 5-point scale), there is a 33 percent increase in
frequency of marijuana use.
-- The frequency of marijuana use drops 10 percent for each degree that teens
perceive their parents as monitoring their activities, even after accounting for
influence of peers.
-- The risk of using an illicit drug drops by 14 percent for each degree that
teens believe parents are monitoring their activities.
"This means even if your kids are hanging out with friends who are using
marijuana or hard drugs, if you are monitoring where they go and what they're
doing, then you can decrease the risk that your kids will be using these
substances also," Hoffmann said. "As long as kids are aware that their
parents know what they're doing, they're going to be less likely to use it."
The researchers advocate asking teens questions like:
Who are your friends?
Whose house are you going to?
What will you be doing?
Which adults will be around?
When will you be home?
Another major finding of the study shows that siblings – who are, of course,
both family members and peers – wield a strong influence. Having an older
sibling who used marijuana increased the frequency of pot smoking 58 percent.
The professors hope their research helps inform policy makers and drug
prevention professionals.
"Many prevention efforts are focused on school and peers and that's fine,
but they haven't focused as much as they could have on siblings and parents,"
Bahr said. "Prevention efforts should be more multi-faceted." (December
2005)