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STUDY: Parents' Drinking Patterns Strongly Affect Teen Substance Use

According to recent research, children whose parents consume alcohol face a 24% chance of drinking themselves, which increases to 28% if the parents use both alcohol and tobacco.

The investigation included data from more than 4,200 Brazilian adolescents and their caregivers, revealing that parental drinking behaviors are among the strongest indicators of substance use in teenagers. When parents completely abstain from alcohol and tobacco, 89% of adolescents refrain from using these substances.

Professor Zila Sanchez, the study's lead researcher, highlighted that authoritative parenting—characterized by a combination of warmth and firm boundaries—is the most effective approach for lowering the likelihood of teen substance use.

While authoritarian parenting styles were linked to decreased drug use, they were less successful in preventing alcohol consumption. In contrast, permissive and neglectful parenting did not provide any protective effects against substance use.

The researchers also cautioned that frequent parental drinking, especially when regarded as harmless, raises the risk of adolescent substance use regardless of the quality of emotional relationships between parents and children.


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