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Teen Risk Factors for Becoming Involved in Substance Abuse

j0178822Why do some teens get involved in substance abuse while others do not? Many parents ponder this question as their children become teenagers. What causes a teen to be pressured or influenced into making poor decisions? What factors increase the risks that a youth will smoke cigarettes, drink alcohol, or use drugs?

Fortunately, we have some answers that can help. The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) at Columbia University has been conducting an annual survey, known as “The National Survey of American Attitudes on Substance Abuse,” since 1995, to try to identify characteristics, situations and circumstances that increase the risk of youth substance abuse. With 18 years of research, some trends have emerged that have allowed CASA to identify information that can help parents:

Factors that Increase Risk of Substance Abuse

While there are many factors that can lead a teen to substance abuse, CASA’s survey showed that the most common were boredom, high stress, and too much money. Here are the specific results from CASA:

 

Factors that Reduce Risk of Substance Abuse

 

Youth Begin Early

CASA survey results found that the age youth begin abusing substances is much earlier than parents expect:

Interestingly, a new study from Michigan State University is showing that girls are now drinking their first alcoholic drinks before boys, despite the fact that boys were historically the first to start using alcohol.

Ways Parents Can Reduce Risk

As a result of this research, CASA has identified five ways that parents can reduce the possibility that their children will smoke, get drunk or use illegal drugs before age 21:

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