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Movies
Spur Teen Smoking
If you
want to prevent your teens from smoking, you might consider screening
the movies they watch.
That parental advice comes in a
study in the July issue of the Archives of Pediatric Adolescent
Medicine.
Dartmouth College researchers say
they've found a link between adolescent smoking and movies, and
they advise pediatricians to urge parents to monitor their teens
access to movies. The researchers also say parents should pay
attention to movie ratings.
"We want pediatricians to
talk with parents of adolescents about how movies can influence
their young teenagers," James Sargent, an associate professor
at the Dartmouth Medical School, says in a news release.
"Parents need to know that
if they can reduce their child's exposure to smoking in movies,
it may have a profound impact on reducing their chances of starting
to smoke and drink," Sargent says.
He and his fellow researchers have
published a number of papers and articles, which are cited in
this new study. The Dartmouth researchers have concluded that
teens see thousands of depictions of smoking by movie stars and
these images influence teens' behavior and attitudes.
In this new study, the researchers
offer advice to parents on how to limit their teens access to
movies. That includes reducing subscriptions to movie channels
on cable TV, limiting movie video or DVDs to one per week, and
restricting access to R-rated movies.
"Such parenting measures could
reduce rates of adolescent smoking without directly addressing
the behavior," the researchers conclude.
More information
Here's where you can learn more
about smoking
and youth.
Reference
Source 101
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