PARENTS AND PEERS INFLUENCE TEEN SMOKING AND DRINKING
Teen smoking and drinking do not occur in a vacuum-both parents and peers may
promote or discourage substance abuse among teens, according to a study of more
than 4,500 students in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades. "This is one
of the first studies to report that both
peer and parent influences are independently associated with smoking and
drinking," said lead author Bruce Simons-Morton, EdD, MPH, of the National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development at National Institutes of
Health, in Bethesda, Maryland.
The teen study participants took a substance abuse survey that included
questions on how many of their friends smoke and drink and how often friends had
encouraged them to smoke or drink over the past year. The teens were also
asked how aware their parents were of their daily
activities, about their parents' expectations regarding smoking and drinking and
about their parents' level of esteem for them.
Girls and boys who associated with friends who smoke and drank were more likely
to do so themselves, the researchers found. "Our findings underscore the
powerful influence affiliation with substance-using peers can have on smoking
and drinking," said Simons-Morton. The study
results are published in the February 2001 issue of the journal Health Education
& Behavior.
In general, girls were more likely to drink than boys, and were more susceptible
to peer pressure from friends encouraging them to drink, according to the study.
"This is consistent with other
research suggesting that girls may be more susceptible than boys to peer
influences to smoke or drink," noted Simons-Morton.
Parents also appeared to influence teen smoking and drinking, the researchers
found. "Teens who perceived their parents like them, respect them, take them
seriously, listen to them and give
reasons for rules and decisions that involve them were less likely to smoke and
drink," said Simons-Morton.
'Teens with parents who do not establish clear behavioral expectations, do not
keep themselves informed about their teens life and do not demonstrate their
regard for their teen are more likely to experiment with substance use," the
researcher added.
According to the researchers, one way to help teens resist the negative
influences of their peers is by bolstering their social skills training.
"Our data suggest that social skills training may be even
more important for girls than for boys," said Simons-Morton. Ideally,
parents could also be offered training to help them maintain open lines of
communication with their adolescent children. "The challenge is to find
effective ways of reaching the parents of early
adolescents and educating them about authoritative parenting practices, in which
parents are both demanding and responsive to their adolescent children," said
Simons-Morton. "High parental expectations, involvement and monitoring
have been found to be negatively associated with substance use."
Health Education & Behavior, a bimonthly peer-reviewed journal of the Society
for Public Health Education (SOPHE), publishes research on critical health
issues for professionals in the implementation and administration of public
health information programs. SOPHE is an
international, non-profit professional organization that promotes the health of
all
people through education. For information about the journal, contact
Elaine Auld at (202) 408-9804.