Children whose parents did not disclose drug use, but delivered a strong antidrug message, were more likely to exhibit antidrug attitudes, a new study has found.
Jennifer A Kam, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Ashley V Middleton, MSO Health Information Management, surveyed 253 Latino and 308 European American students from the sixth through eighth grades.
The students reported on the conversations they have had with their parents about alcohol, cigarettes, and marijuana.
Past research found that teens reported that they would be less likely to use drugs if their parents told them about their own past drug use.
In Kam and Middleton's study, however, Latino and European American children who reported that their parents talked about the negative consequences, or regret, over their own past substance use were actually less likely to report anti-substance-use perceptions.
This finding means that when parents share their past stories of substance use, even when there is a learning lesson, such messages may have unintended consequences for early adolescent children.
For example, parents may talk to their kids about the negative consequences of using substances, how to avoid substances, that they disapprove of substance use, the family rules against substance use, and stories about others who have gotten in trouble from using substances.
"Parents may want to reconsider whether they should talk to their kids about times when they used substances in the past and not volunteer such information, Kam said in a statement.
The study was published in the journal Human Communication Research.
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