Teenagers and Drug Abuse
Teenagers and Drug Abuse
Many teenagers today use illegal drugs and substances. There are many factors that influence drug use. Whether people say it is parents that influence the most or peers that influence the most, each one has a role in it. Some surveys say drug use is going down and some say it is going up. Whichever the case may be it is still a problem to our society.
The presence of a parent is no as important as people think when talking about drug use. Research shows that the “presence or absence of parents is less crucial… than the quality of the parent child relationship”(Whitman 22). Also there are many things that can happen in a family. When there is a drastic change in the family structure, for example, a parent is replaced by another person it could have an impact on drug use later in life. As research shows, “changes in the family structures should be considered when investigation relationships and drug use”(McCullum 22).
Relationships with parents have always been very important to teenagers, whether it influences them in a positive way or a negative way. For example, “if parents can remain warm, firm and supportive throughout the often troublesome time of adolescence” they “will still feel secure and loved”(McCallum 26). Therefore better communication between parents and children about the dangers of drug use has helped the decline in teenage drug use (Vise 1). When teenagers have a good communication between their parents and them, they tend to be more open with their parents about drugs. Parents will, in most cases, communicate with their children their disapproval of illegal drug abuse. If this happens, teenagers will be more apt to listen to their parents. In studies shown “teens who have a close relationship with their parents report low alcohol and drug use”(McCullum 22). Many people think it is only the behavior of the parent that counts the most, but actually it is the “parental attitudes towards a behavior that influences an adolescents’ behavior more than the actual behavior of the parent”(McCallum 22).
One of the main reasons for developing a drug abuse problem is a poor relationship with the parent or parents. These adolescents run a greater risk than all the other, of having a drug problem(McCallum 25). Also...