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Journal Article

Citation

Ahern NR, Kemppainen J, Thacker P. J. Child Adolesc. Psychiatr. Nurs. 2016; 29(1): 6-14.

Affiliation

School of Nursing, University of North Carolina Wilmington, NC, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/jcap.12129

PMID

26910348

Abstract

PROBLEM: Adolescence is a developmental stage marked by risk-taking and limited comprehension of dangers of risky behaviors. Previous research has focused on adolescents' perspective of risk with little evidence on parents' knowledge regarding risk.

METHODS: This qualitative study examined parental knowledge and perspectives of child/teen risk behaviors associated with salvia, sexting, inhalant use/abuse, and self/participant-assisted choking. A sample of 30 parents of children/teens aged 10-17 completed a self-administered survey based on Flanagan's critical incident technique.

FINDINGS: Data were analyzed according to Flanagan's guidelines. Two advanced practice nurses determined category reliability with 95% agreement. The survey yielded five categories of parental responses to potential risky behaviors in their child/teen including the following: talking to my children, setting up consequences, confronting the child, seeking help, and talking to others. Although the majority of the parents were aware of newer behaviors, less than one half of the participants reported discussing risks with their child/teen. One third reported that their child knew a friend who was thinking about/tried sexting. One quarter of parents reported that they were not monitoring their child/teen's media use.

CONCLUSIONS: Study findings provide important implications for developing an evidence-based education intervention to improve parents' awareness, knowledge, and identification of risk behaviors in their children/teens.


Language: en

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