Parental Monitoring Can Curb Teen Marijuana Use

Those who keep an eye on their kids help stave off unwanted behavior, study says

Posted: November 19, 2009

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Nov. 19 (HealthDay News) -- Parents who take the time to know what their teenage children are up to and have strong anti-drug views can be effective in reducing their children's marijuana use, a new study says.

Among all the illicit drugs, marijuana is the most widely used by teens, with nearly 42 percent of high school seniors having tried it, according to the study authors.

"We've been working on attenuating drug use in kids," said lead researcher William Crano, a professor of psychology at Claremont Graduate University, in Claremont, Calif. "What we have been noticing in our research is that parental monitoring seems to have a strong relationship to lessening of drug use in young adolescents."

To determine if they were on the right track, Crano and his colleague Andrew Lac, a doctoral student at Claremont, decided to see what other research had found on the effect of parental monitoring on teen drug use --particularly marijuana.

So, Crano and Lac reviewed 17 studies, which involved more than 35,000 people. The studies all had adolescent participants, focused on marijuana and monitoring by parents, and the level of parental monitoring was evaluated by the teens themselves.

"We found the effect was there," Crano said, especially for teenage girls. "It was clear that kids who thought their parents were monitoring them used much less marijuana than kids who didn't."

That finding held true for all 17 studies, Crano said. "The interesting thing is this has to do with kids' perception of parental monitoring, not necessarily what their parents are actually doing," he said.

"If your kids think that you know what they are doing, and where they're at, and who they're with and what they are doing when they are not in your sight, that has a big impact on the kind of trouble they are going to get into," he added.

Crano thinks these findings, published in the November issue of Perspectives on Psychological Science, would hold up if researchers looked at other drug use or other bad behaviors. Continued smoking of marijuana can lead to a number of serious health threats, including depression, cognitive impairment, cardiovascular disease, and certain cancers, the researchers said.

There are two ways parents can monitor their children, Crano said. "Either they watch them like a hawk or the kid discloses what he's up to," he said. Both methods work to keep children away from drugs, he said.

"If parents give the impression to their kids that they really care about them, that they are really watching what they are doing, that they are concerned, that has a strong impact on what the children are going to do in terms of antisocial behavior, which includes marijuana use," Crano said.

R. Gil Kerlikowske, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, agrees that parents have a key role to play in keeping their children from using drugs.

"It's the most significant role," Kerlikowske said. "A lot of the advertisements, a lot of the information out there has made parents much more comfortable in speaking to their children, particularly about drugs," he said.

The White House drug czar said parental monitoring, along with school and community programs, can be effective ways of steering children away from drugs.

"If you have parents involved in prevention work, and if you have some school-based curriculum around drugs, and there can be some support in neighborhoods and community groups and church -- that is a very strong approach to keeping kids healthy," he said.

More information

For more on what parents can do to keep their kids from drugs, visit the Partnership for a Drug-Free America.

Research vs Opinion

"The argument that illegal marijuana is easier to get than legal (for over 21) alcohol doesn't add up. Kids consume more than twice as much alcohol as marijuana and they mainly get it from their parents' liquor cabinets, friends, etc"

A national survey of high school seniors reported that 87% of them found it easier to obtain marijuana than either alcohol or tobacco. As for "kids consume twice as much", that has to be something the poster pulled out of his, uh, head. I can't even figure out how you could quantify alcohol vs marijuana consumption in those terms.

By weight? By volume? Neither one would have any meaning at all.

Buzzby of OH @ Nov 19, 2009 23:29:59 PM

Legalization and Regulation

Would stop young kids from smoking Marijuana I know because I did have my first couple beers till late into high school when I had a car and was smart enough to make some decisions on my own, you know why I didnt drink beer till my senior year because some one had to be 21 to get it for me. But my little brother Smoked weed for the first time in eight grade and still does today there is nothing wrong with it he has done his homework and made a responsible decision to continue smoking because he enjoys it he is not disfunction-al or always in trouble or moving on to harder drug because he knows that most will create addiction and have terrible health effect but not Marijuana. Though he was only able to try it because illegal drugs are the easiest for any kid to get there hands on unless you keep your kid on a leash like a dog all the time which I dont recommend for obvious reasons. I know even for me today I am now 19 in college and I still think Mariuana is easier for me to get a hold of than alcohol because there is no regulation.

Marijuana is SAFER : So Why are We Driving People to Drink? Its a great book I recommend every one reads especially If you disagree with legalization and Regulation of Marijuana this will get your fact straight and also help tell you tell your children the truth about drugs.

Kevin of VA @ Nov 19, 2009 20:55:49 PM

.

Susan, I understand where you are coming from but the fact is it does add up. I know from personal experience that at any moment I could ask the stoner next to me in high school where to score some pot, and I'll be damned if he didn't have several hook ups.

Sure you could say the same about alcohol, but I can't tell you how many times my friends and I went "liquorless" BECAUSE we:

1.) Couldn't get an over-21 hookup.

2.) Didn't have any liquor cabinets to raid.

3.) Didn't have a fake ID.

The drug dealer NOT ONLY will not ask your child for ID, but he will most likely have other drugs available for your kid to try (A la Gateway Theory)?

If marijuana is legalized, I'm not saying kids won't still have access, but it WILL reduce the access. It will make it just as difficult to get marijuana as it is alcohol.

This would give kids NO INCENTIVE to go to a drug dealer unless they were trying harder drugs. If someone is never exposed to that environment, they will have no incentive to even delve into that, I know I wouldn't have.

But something that can produce paper, cloth, and rope, cannot physically kill you and can help the sick is illegal and something needs to be done. Educate your children. Whether marijuana is illegal or legal, it's still there in abundance.

J Harowicz of PA @ Nov 19, 2009 19:18:40 PM

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