Study says ‘pep talk can reduce violence, alcoholic problems among teenagers’
August 4th, 2010 - 2:59 pm ICT by ANIWashington, August 4 (ANI): A brief motivational talk can reduce the chances of teenagers getting violent or experiencing drinking problems, according to a study by University of Michigan Health System (UMHS).
The conclusion is drawn from the special issue on violence and human rights, which includes the work of UMHS researchers who immersed themselves at the Hurley Medical Center emergency department, in Flint in Michigan for three years.
“Therapists used motivational interviewing which is well-suited for adolescent development,” says study lead author Maureen Walton, research associate professor in the U-M Department of Psychiatry, Addiction Research Center said.
“It doesn’t preach or tell teens what to do, but allows adolescents to weigh the pros and cons of their choices in reference to their goals,” she added.
According to UMHS, the researchers offered help to 726 adolescents, ages 14-18, who complained that they experienced aggression or had a drink of beer, wine or liquor at least two or three times in the past year.
A one-on-one talk with a therapist resulted in a 34 percent reduction in peer aggression. Teens who received only a brochure had a 16 percent drop in aggression over the next three months.
The study showed similar drops in alcohol misuse after teens heard prevention messages delivered by a therapist or while using a role-playing computer program.
“Violence and alcohol use are preventable behaviors and the emergency department can be a key location for reaching high-risk teenagers,” senior author Rebecca Cunningham, M.D., an emergency room physician and director of the University of Michigan Injury Research Center said.
The study also focused on computer screening with teenagers, which worked well because of their comfort with using technology. The computer program included animation demonstrating how to handle drinking, driving and conflicts with peers. (ANI)
- Teen drinking linked to higher internet use - May 10, 2011
- Adult-supervised drinking in teens may up alcohol use - Apr 29, 2011
- Binge drinking affects female teens negatively - Jul 17, 2011
- Parenting style can prevent heavy drinking - Jun 24, 2010
- Social networking teens may turn drinks, drugs addicted - Aug 26, 2011
- Mums who drink early in pregnancy 'more likely to have unruly kids' - Mar 22, 2011
- Why problem drinking during adolescence is never 'just a phase' - Feb 16, 2011
- Alcohol intake among Indian teenagers rise - Oct 17, 2010
- Parents important for keeping teens off alcohol - Mar 08, 2011
- Parental monitoring may protect 'bad' boys from heavy drug use - Aug 18, 2010
- Binge-drinking teens risk lasting brain changes - Apr 05, 2011
- Binge drinking increases impulsive behavior in males - Nov 17, 2010
- Fizzy soft drinks spur teens' aggressiveness - Oct 25, 2011
- Severely obese teens 'no more likely to be depressed' - Apr 22, 2011
- Lesbian, gay, bisexual teens '40pc more likely to be punished' - Dec 06, 2010
Tags: addiction research, adolescent development, alcohol misuse, alcoholic problems, august 4, beer wine, computer program, emergency department, emergency room physician, high risk, hurley medical center, michigan health system, pep talk, playing computer, prevention messages, rebecca cunningham, research associate professor, risk teenagers, university of michigan health system, using technology