This September thousands of parents are going to watch there chid walk out the door and off to Uni. Watching your child head to another part of the country, can produced feelings that are new and strange and sad and thrilling — but none that are at all special, or unique, nor more poignant or significant than those being felt right now by thousands of other parents in the same position around the UK.
Personally, all told the overriding feeling is an
unsettling and haphazard brew of pride, caution, happiness, dread, excitement
and — most importantly, concern — concern that she’ll be safe, as she hopefully
makes smart, healthy choices while embarking on their first extended stay away from home .
That said, as your child ( figuratively looks over her
shoulder seeking guidance), there’s some encouraging health news about teenage behaviour
that’s making me breathe a bit easier.
Called the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System, the recently released
information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is a biennial
report that “monitors six types of health-risk behaviors that contribute to the
leading causes of death and disability among youth and young adults.” They are:
•Behaviors that contribute to unintentional injuries and
violence
•Sexual behaviors related to unintended pregnancy and
sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV infection
•Alcohol and other drug use
•Tobacco use
•Unhealthy dietary behaviors
•Inadequate physical activity
And for parents like me, the good news is most of the
data in the report shows that today’s teens are safer and making better health
choices then previous teenage groups. Meanwhile, they are also making much better
decisions than teens did a generation ago.
More than 10,000 high school students were surveyed in
2015, just as a group that size has been queried every other year since 1991.
And while today’s parents may be working off perceptions that their teenagers
are growing up “faster” then they did, while making more dubious choices in a
world filled with added temptation, the data indicate just the opposite.
However, on the flip side, there are areas where teen
choices are not so great. Moreover, this information comes from self-reported
data, which itself skews the results somewhat, but overall the behavioral
trends are encouraging.
Pertaining to high school teenagers, here are some of the
important findings of those surveyed:
•Lower Rates of Tobacco Use: 10.8 percent smoke
cigarettes. That’s down from 15.7 percent two years ago; down from 23 percent
over a decade (2005); and down from 36.4 percent since 1997.
•Decrease in Trying Marijuana, Cocaine: 38.6 percent
report having tried smoking pot, down from 40.7 percent in 2013. Meanwhile,
those who tried cocaine also fell, yet slightly so, to 5.2 percent from 5.5
percent two years earlier.
•Fewer Experimenting with Alcohol: 63.2 percent reported
drinking at least once, down from 80.4 percent 20 years ago.
•Decreased Binge Drinking: 17.7 percent reported having
had “5 of more drinks in a row in past month,” which was down from 20.8 percent
two years ago, and down from 25.5 percent over the last decade.
•Less Sexual Activity: 41.2 percent said they’ve engaged
in intercourse at least once, as compared to 54.1 percent of teens in 1991.
•Near-Universal Use of Seat Belts: 93.9 percent of teens
“regularly wear a seat belt,” which is up significantly from 89.8 percent in 2005,
and up drastically from 74.1 percent in 1991. (In fact, with the exception of
survey years 1995 and 2003, seat-belt usage has constantly increased.)
Now, aside from this Youth Risk Behavior report, overall
there has been a drastic decrease in teen births. In 2015, only 2.3 percent of
teenage girls in the U.S. delivered a child, as compared to 5.6 percent of
teenage girls 20 years earlier.
“It’s exciting and really unprecedented to see these
types of declines on a health issue,” said Ginny Ehrlich, chief executive of
the Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, as quoted in Vox‘s June 9
report on the Youth Risk Survey. “Last year alone, the decline was 9 percent.
Having spent a decade in child obesity prevention, where change happens much
slower, this feels monumental.” A significant contributor to this trend is that
teenagers, according to the CDC, are using contraceptives at a swiftly
increasing rate.
Now, do problem areas still remain? Of course they do.
Condom use “during last sexual intercourse” has slipped
from a high of nearly 63 percent of teens in 2003, to just 56.9 percent last
year. Obesity rates are higher now than ever, and far too many teens admit to
participating in the very dangerous activity of texting while driving. And in a
separate survey, full-time college students aged 18-22 report that they drink
more often (59.8 percent vs. 51.5) than those of the same age who don’t attend
college. All of which produces unease for me as my daughter takes her first
steps on a college campus.
However, all in all, when you step back and take a look
at the big picture, it appears that our teenagers are being smarter than we
think.
I know as a parent, I get wrapped up — maybe too much —
in what’s not going well, and trying to anticipate danger before it presents
itself (which is not completely a bad thing). That said, what I’ve learned is that
apparently our kids are behaving better than we thought. And most of all, we
should be encouraged in general by the choices they are making during the most
trying and demanding times of their young lives. I do realise that this survey was done in America,but maybe it is a reflection of young adults all over the world. Lets hope so.
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