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Keeping our Teens Safe from Themselves

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Title: Keeping our Teens Safe from Themselves


1
Keeping our Teens Safe from Themselves
Presented by (add presenter name here)
  • Written by Alina Baltazar, LMSW, CFLE
  • Assistant Professor and MSW program director of
    Social Work for Andrews University in Berrien
    Springs, Michigan, USA
  • From Revival and Reformation Families Reaching
    Across.

2
Introduction
  • Gods task for parents.
  • Adolescent growth and change.
  • Experimentation is common.
  • Vignettes
  • Jessicas story
  • Rays story
  • Jeffs story
  • Train up a child in the way he should go, and
    when he is old he will not depart from it.
    Proverbs 226
  • Small group activity
  • What fears do these scenarios bring out in you as
    a parent?
  • Are there things you can do to decrease the
    chance your teenagers end up in such horrible
    circumstances?

3
Adolescent Substance Use Rates
  • Vast majority of 9-12th graders in the US report
    drinking alcohol once in their life.
  • 90 of youth age 12-20 binge drink alcohol on
    multiple occasions in their lifetime (most are
    college students).
  • Almost half have used marijuana in their
    lifetime, about 25 during the last 30 days.
  • Almost a quarter have used prescription drugs
    without a prescription in their lifetime.
  • About 10 have used inhalants in their lifetime.

4
Power of Communication
  • Communicate care
  • Stop whatever you are doing and listen.
  • Actively, unconditionally listen.
  • Listen to their point of view.
  • Educate on the dangers of substance use
  • Choose a good time to talk.
  • Share stories from the news or people you know.
  • Make them away of legal issues.
  • Communicate clear expectations
  • This is especially important when there is
    limited supervision or they are away at school.
  • Make sure they know what the consequences will
    be.
  • Role-play
  • Pair up with someone else and practice what you
    would say to your teen about drugs and what
    behavior you expect. Then switch roles.

5
Parental Monitoring
  • Parental monitoring and involvement
  • Keep prescriptions locked up.
  • Discussion question
  • What will you do to monitor your teens behavior?

6
Religiosity
  • Decreases substance use.
  • Do you know that your bodies are temples of the
    Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have
    received from God? You are not your own you are
    bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your
    bodies. 1 Corinthians 619-20
  • Support their spiritual journey.
  • Discussion Question
  • What helped your religious development during the
    teen years?
  • What have you or could you do to support your
    teens religious development?

7
Adolescent Suicide Rates
  • Third to second leading cause of death for those
    age 15-24 in many countries
  • For every death there are 20 attempts
  • Rates are increasing worldwide.

8
Suicide Risk Factors
  • Family history
  • Depression
  • Low self-esteem
  • Substance use
  • Impulsiveness
  • Females more likely to attempt, males more likely
    to succeed.
  • Anxious attachment to parents
  • Sexual abuse
  • Lack of supportive friends
  • Overwhelming loss or stress
  • Access to a firearm or lethal means.

9
Bullying
  • Get involved when serious or repetitive.
  • Approach teacher then principal.
  • Get authorities involved if severe.
  • Intervention

10
Suicide Warning Signs
  • Giving hints may be want to be around
  • Talking about feeling hopeless
  • Isolation
  • Writing about death
  • Giving away treasured possessions
  • Losing interest
  • Trouble concentrating
  • Changes in eating or sleeping
  • Risk-behaviors

11
Coping Skills
  • Support
  • Healthy lifestyle
  • Social activity
  • Relaxation/medication
  • Positive thinking
  • Suffer consequences of their own behavior
  • Anything that lessons physical strength
    enfeebles the mind and makes it less capable of
    discriminating between right and wrong. We become
    less capable of choosing the good and have less
    strength of will do that which we know to be
    right. Christs Object Lessons, p.346
  • Individual activity What do you do to cope?

12
Professional Resources
  • Counselors
  • Medication
  • Psychiatrist
  • Inpatient hospitalization
  • Role-play
  • Similar to the role-play communicating about
    substances, now practice what you would say about
    suicide, then switch roles.
  • What situation would prompt you to say something?

13
References
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    (2010). Alcohol and public health (Fact sheet).
    Retrieved from http//www.cdec.gov/alcohol/fact-sh
    eets/under-age-drinking.htm.
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    (2011). Trends in the prevalence of alcohol use
    national YRBS 1991-2011. Retrieved from
    www.cdec.gov/healthyouth/yrbs/pdf/us_alcohol_trend
    _yrbs.pdf
  • Cail, J. LaBrie, J. W. (2010). Disparity
    between perceived alcohol-related attitudes of
    parents and peers increases alcohol risk in
    college students. Addictive Behavior, 35(2),
    135-139.
  • Compas, B.E., Hinden, B.R., Gerhardt, C. A.
    (1995). Adolescent development Pathways and
    process of risk and resilience. Annual Review
    Psychology, 46, 265-293.
  • Labrie, J.W. Sessoms, A. (2012). Parents still
    matter The role of parental attachment in risky
    drinking among college students. Journal of
    Child Adolescent Substance Abuse, 21(1),
    91-104.
  • Low, N. C. P., Dugas, E., OLoughlin, E.,
    Rodriguez, D., Contreras, G., Chaiton, M.,
    OLoughlin, J. (2012). Common stressful life
    events and difficulties are associated with
    mental health symptoms and substance use in young
    adolescents. BMC Psychiatry, 12(116). Retrieved
    from http//www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1471
    -244X-12-116.pdf.
  • Pierorazio, D. A. (2009). A reframing of
    protective factors in the context of risk,
    adversity, nd competence in adolescents.
    Retrieved from http//www.csm.edu/wfdata/files/Aca
    demics/Library/InstitutionalRepository/19.pdf
  • Scales, P.C. Roehlkepartain, E.C. (2004).
    Community service and service-learning in U.S.
    public schools, 2004. Retrieved from
    http//www.search-institute.org/system/files/2004G
    2GCompleteSurvey.pdf
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
    (2013). Respond to bullying. Retrieved from
    http//www.stopbullying.gov/respond/index.html.
  • Werner, E. (2005). Resilience and recovery
    Findings from the Kauai longitudinal study.
    Research Policy, and Practice in Childrens
    Mental Health, 19(1), 11-14.
  • World Health Organization. (2013). Suicide
    prevention (Fact Sheet). Retrieved from
    http//www.who.int/mental_health/prevention/suicid
    e/suicideprevent/en/
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