98%
921
2 minutes
20
Parenting is a key influence and prevention target for adolescent substance use, and changes dramatically in form and function during adolescence. This theoretical synthesis reviews evidence of associations of substance use-specific parenting behaviors, dimensions, and styles with adolescent substance use, and integrates key developmental and family theories (e.g., bioecological, dynamical systems, family systems, developmental cascades) and methodological-conceptual advances to illustrate the complex role that parenting plays for the development of adolescent substance use in combination with child and contextual influences. The resulting bioecological systems cascade model centers the dynamic co-development of parenting and child influences in developmental cascades that lead to more or less risk for adolescent substance use. These trajectories are initiated by intergenerational influences, including genetics, parents' familial environments, and child-parent attachment. Culture and context influences are a holistic backdrop shaping parent-adolescent trajectories. Parenting is influences are conceptualized as a complex process by which specific parenting behaviors are informed by and accumulate into parenting dimensions which together comprise general parenting styles and are informed by the broader family context. The co-development of parenting and child biobehavioral risk is shaped by both parents and children, including by the genetics and environments they do and do not share. This co-development is dynamic, and developmental transitions of individuals and the family lead to periods of increased lability or variability that can change the longer-term trajectories of children's risk for substance use. Methodological avenues for future studies to operationalize the model are discussed.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10694242 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1277419 | DOI Listing |
Child Abuse Negl
September 2025
Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Background: Population surveys on child wellbeing require a brief, validated tool to measure child and adolescent maltreatment. The 7-item Short Child Maltreatment Questionnaire (SCMQ), developed by a WHO expert committee, has not been psychometrically tested.
Objective: This study aimed to determine the factor structure, measurement invariance and correlates of a modified version of the SCMQ (6 of its 7 items) in a sample of adolescents attending schools in England.
Neurotoxicology
September 2025
Laboratory of Pharmacology of Inflammation and Behavioral (LAFICO), Health Science Institute, Federal University of Pará, Belém 66075110, PA, Brazil. Electronic address:
Ketamine has been widely used as a recreational substance by adolescents and young adults in nightclubs and raves in an acute manner, especially during the weekend. Considering the scarcity of evidence on the harmful consequences of adolescent ketamine recreational use on the central nervous system, primarily related to motor function, this study aimed to investigate the behavioral, biochemical, and neurochemical consequences on motor function induced by ketamine use, evaluating the motor cortex, cerebellum, and striatum in early abstinence. Adolescent female Wistar rats (28 days old) received ketamine by intranasal route (10mg/kg/day) for 3 consecutive days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcad Pediatr
September 2025
Division of Emergency and Transport Medicine, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California; Department of Pediatrics, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California. Electronic address:
Background: Fatal opioid overdoses have increased among adolescents. Emergency Departments (EDs) are critical access points for connecting adults with opioid use disorder (OUD) to medication-assisted treatment (MAT). Whether this is feasible in pediatric patients is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSleep Med
August 2025
Department of Epidemiology, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, Rotterdam, Zuid-Holland, the Netherlands; Trimbos Institute - Netherlands Institute for Mental Health and Addiction, Utrecht, the Netherlands. Electronic address:
Objectives: Sleep is known to change around pregnancy. Yet current studies often do not take into account the multidimensionality of sleep and its changes from preconception to postpartum. Therefore, this study aims to explore maternal multivariate sleep trajectory from preconception to 6 months postpartum and related determinants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Trauma Stress
September 2025
Center of Alcohol and Substance Use Studies, Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, Rutgers University-New Brunswick, Piscataway, New Jersey, USA.
Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR) data advances are becoming more common and more important across research fields given the large amount of research data in need of synthesis and application. Many novel methods improve the efficiency and accuracy of data reuse, combination, and synthesis, which is necessary given that there are over 500 published randomized controlled trials of posttraumatic stress disorder treatments in adults; however, these methods are still relatively new to the field of traumatic stress research. We provide a brief overview of relevant FAIR data efforts from other fields and within trauma health care and research; share examples of trauma-related FAIR data efforts to demonstrate recent advances and challenges; and suggest potential next steps to continue making trauma data more FAIR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF