|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
You Can Be a Full-Time Mom... and Still Have a Full-Time Income! Find out how this can work for you! |
Parenting
Resources -
Press Releases
TEENS REPORT PARENTAL INATTENTION TO THEIR
IMPORTANT “RITES OF PASSAGE” HAS HIGH PRICE
TAG
National
study ties teen transitions to alcohol and
drug use,
sexual
behavior, driving habits, and mental health
Sources
collected by
Amanda Bach
BOSTON,
December 2005 –
Almost half of
America’s high school teens report parental
inattention to what they consider to be key
transitions during their adolescence,
according to a new SADD/Liberty Mutual study
released. The study suggests that
this lack of timely parental involvement in
important “rites of passage” comes with a
high price tag: the potential for dangerous
behaviors that can lead to illness, injury,
or death as teens seek alternative
milestones to demonstrate growing maturity
and independence.
The sixth
annual Teens Today report reveals
that high school teens whose parents
pay the least attention to significant
transition periods (42 %), such as
puberty, school change, and key birthdays,
are more likely than teens whose parents pay
the most attention (18 %) to engage in
high-risk behaviors, including drinking,
drug use, early sexual intercourse, and
dangerous driving. They are more than twice
as likely to report daily stress and appear
to be twice as likely to report being
depressed and bored.
“In a culture
largely devoid of formal ‘rites of passage,’
and too often unobservant of the few that
exist, young people may make up their own.
Far too frequently they include drinking,
drugging, and other potentially destructive
behaviors,” said Stephen Wallace, chairman
and chief executive officer of the national
SADD organization. “By paying attention to
the important transitions of adolescence,
parents can make it less likely that poor
choices will become their child’s
self-constructed mileposts along the path to
adulthood.”
Other
important transitions cited by teens
included receiving a driver’s license,
obtaining their first car, graduating from
high school, and dating a first boyfriend or
girlfriend.
Alcohol, Drugs and Sex
Teenagers
in the ninth through 12th grades
who report high levels of parental attention
(defined as communicating about and
recognizing or celebrating important
adolescent “life events”)
are
significantly less likely than those who
report low levels of parental attention to
use alcohol and marijuana or to have ever
illegally used prescription drugs.
Teen Risky
Behaviors by Parental Attention
The data also
shows that these teens are more likely to
delay sexual intercourse and some other
sexual behaviors.
Note: If you
are not able to view this chart, please see:
www.libertymutual.com.
Safer
Behind the Wheel
The Teens
Today research highlights the effect of
parental attention on another significant
teen rite of passage: driving. Teen drivers
who report high levels of parental attention
are significantly more likely than those who
report low levels of parental attention to
say they never speed (45 percent to 14
percent). The data also suggests that these
teens are more likely to wear seat belts
while driving and are less likely to drive
while impaired or to ride in a car with an
impaired driver.
“It is clear
from this exciting new research that
adequately noting the important times in
their children’s lives – such as the
transition to driving age – is a necessary,
and potentially life-saving, exercise,” said
Paul Condrin, Liberty Mutual executive vice
president, Personal Market. “Motor vehicle
crashes are the number-one killer of young
people ages 15 to 20 in this country, and a
large number of these deaths – 38 percent of
males and 25 percent of females – involve
speeding,” he added, citing 2004 statistics
from the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration.
Mental Health
Teens in
the low parental attention category appear
to be more than twice as likely to report
regularly feeling stressed, depressed, and
bored. Conversely, teens in the high
parental attention category are
significantly more likely to say they feel
happy every day or almost every day.
Teen Emotional
States by Parental Attention
Note: If you
are not able to view this chart, please see:
www.libertymutual.com.
What
Changed
American
culture has been largely stripped of the
formal demarcations of significant life
changes that marked passage for earlier
generations and still form the basis for
transition and celebration in other
cultures. Seeking affirmation of growth and
movement toward maturity, many young people
then create their own demarcations involving
alcohol and other drug use, early and
intimate sexual behavior, and dangerous
driving – traditions that leave them at
risk.
Why This Is
Important for Families
Teens Today
research makes clear the incredibly
influential role that parents can
play in guiding their teenage children
toward safe, healthy choices. SADD and
Liberty Mutual provide tools to help parents
in this cause: Three Tips for Teen
Transitions and Guidelines for Good
Family Communication are available at
www.sadd.org
and
www.libertymutualinsurance.com.
Additional key findings from this
year’s Teens Today study also are
available online.
Atlantic
Research and Consulting, a division of FIND/SVP,
conducted in-depth interviews with teens in
Phoenix and focus groups and in-depth
interviews in Boston, Minneapolis, San
Francisco, Houston, and Miami. The findings
in the report are based on the completion of
1,968 online interviews (984 parents and a
corresponding teenager for each parent).
Survey results for each group (teen and
parent) can be interpreted at a 95%
confidence interval with +/- 3% error
margin. Analyses of survey subgroups are
subject to wider error margins. Percentages
in the report may add to more or less than
100% due to rounding error or occasions when
multiple response answers were accepted.
Minor statistical weighting was applied to
the teen data.
Research
Partners
SADD, Inc.
(Students Against Destructive Decisions) is
the nation’s preeminent peer-to-peer youth
education organization, with thousands of
chapters in middle schools, high schools,
and colleges. With a mission of preventing
destructive behaviors and addressing
attitudes that are harmful to young people,
SADD sponsors programs that address issues
such as underage drinking, substance abuse,
impaired driving, and teen violence,
depression, and suicide.
Liberty
Mutual Group
is a leading global multi-line group of
insurance companies whose largest line of
business is private passenger auto, based on
2004 net written premium. “Helping people
live safer, more secure lives” since 1912,
Liberty Mutual is the eighth-largest
personal lines writer and fifth-largest
commercial lines writer in the U.S., based
on 2004 direct written premium.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Home
|
About SingleMom.com
|
Contact Us |
Privacy Policy Revised: 04 Jan 2008 12:17:35 -0800 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||