Dedicated to women's health and well-being

News

Sponsored By
Parental Monitoring Can Curb Teen Marijuana Use

Parental Monitoring Can Curb Teen Marijuana Use

November 19, 2009 - 7:13am 198 reads 0 comments

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.

Click here to comment on this article.

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.

Add A New Comment

Start Asking & Sharing



Add A New CommentComments

There are no comments yet. Be the first to get the conversation started.

Log in

Are you a member? Log in first to track your posts

Not a member? Join us. Membership is not required to post.

More information about formatting options

We never share email addresses with third parties. Your email address will be used to notify you of activity on your post and send you our newsletter if you choose to sign up for it.
Verify that you are a human (not a computer):
This is necessary to prevent computer programs from automatically posting spam or other irrelevant content on EmpowHER.com. Enter the characters in the box to the left (case sensitive). Do not enter spaces between the characters.
Image CAPTCHA

Free Weekly Newsletter

Sign up for EmpowHER's weekly newsletter

Featured Provider Discover more about the nation's top provider.

Qiagen - The digene HPV Test

Qiagen - The digene HPV Test

Cervical cancer can be prevented! Its cause is known: HPV (human papillomavirus). HPV is a common sexually transmitted virus that doesn’t normally cause problems.