These five questions, developed by the Child and Family Center at the University of Oregon, highlight skills that are important in preventing the initiation and progression of drug use among youth. For each question, there is a video clip on line at http://www.drugabuse.gov/family-checkup that shows positive and negative examples of the skill and additional videos and information are provided to help you practice.
Questions:
- Are you able to communicate calmly
and clearly with your teenager regarding relationship problems?
- Do you encourage positive behaviors
in your teenager on a daily basis?
- Are you able to negotiate emotional
conflicts with your teenager and work toward a solution?
- Are you able to calmly set limits
when your teenager is defiant or disrespectful? Are you able to set limits
on more serious problem behavior such as drug use, if or when it occurs?
- Do you monitor your teenager to
assure that they do not spend too much unsupervised time with peers?
For more
information on talking to your teens about substance abuse please contact the
SAFE Coalition at 319-293-6412 or by email at info@vbsafecoaliton.com. For other resources please checkout the
coalition’s website at www.vbsafecoalition.com or on
Facebook – Van Buren County SAFE Coalition or on the coalition’s blog at http://vbsafecoalition.blogspot.com
Article and
data provided by the National Institute on Drug Abuse Website.
References
- Dishion, T.J.; Nelson, N.E.; Kavanagh, K. The Family Check-Up with high-risk
young adolescents: Preventing early-onset substance use by parent monitoring.
Behavior Therapy 34: 553-571, 2003.
- Dishion,T.J.; Kavanagh, K.; Schneiger, A.;
Nelson, S.; Kaufman, N.K. Preventing
early adolescent substance use: A family-centered strategy for the public
middle school. Prevention Science 3 (3): 191-201, 2002.
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