Institute of Disaster Management and Vulnerability Studies, University of Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Department of Human Development and Family Sciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Oct 21;24(1):2889. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-20404-0.
Adolescent substance use is recognized as a global health crisis that threatens adolescents' physical and mental health worldwide. Alcohol is the most available one; WHO findings suggest that more than 155 million adolescents, representing over a quarter of the adolescent population aged between 11 and 15, use alcohol-based drinks worldwide. Since adolescents are the future of the world, protecting them from substance use is of paramount importance.
This study aimed to explore the prevalence of adolescent substance use (alcohol, marijuana, and tobacco) among Bhutanese adolescents and examine the association with parent-child connectedness as a protective factor while controlling sociodemographic, socio-emotional distress, and other contextual factors.
A total of 7576 school-going adolescents' data from the 2016 Global School-based Student Health Survey (GSHS) Bhutan dataset were used in this study. To analyze the relationship between predictor and outcome variables, both univariate and multivariate binary logistic regression models were constructed utilizing the "complex samples" tool of SPSS 25. A significance level of p ≤ 0.05 was used for the analyses.
An estimated 30.7% of the Bhutanese school-going adolescents used tobacco, 25.8% consumed alcohol, and 12.7% used marijuana. Parent-child connectedness: (i) child's homework supervision and (ii) child's free time supervision by parents significantly lower the odds of using tobacco and alcohol consumption, while parents understanding child's problem showed no significant association with substance use among the respondents. However, no significant association was found between parent-child connectedness and marijuana use. Besides parental connectedness, anxiety, bullying, passive smoking, school truancy, being involved in fights, or being attacked were also significantly associated with adolescents' substance use.
Parental connectedness has been found to be an important factor that can lead to a substantive reduction in substance use among the adolescents of Bhutan. However, the lesson is pertinent for any global initiatives aiming to prevent the harmful use of substances among global adolescents.
青少年物质使用已被公认为是全球健康危机,它威胁着全球青少年的身心健康。酒精是最容易获取的物质;世界卫生组织的调查结果表明,全世界有超过 1.55 亿青少年(占 11 至 15 岁青少年人口的四分之一以上)使用含酒精的饮料。由于青少年是世界的未来,保护他们免受物质使用的影响至关重要。
本研究旨在探讨不丹青少年物质使用(酒精、大麻和烟草)的流行率,并检验父母与子女的联系作为保护因素的相关性,同时控制社会人口统计学、社会情感困扰和其他背景因素。
本研究使用了来自 2016 年全球学校学生健康调查(GSHS)不丹数据集的 7576 名在校青少年的数据。为了分析预测变量和结果变量之间的关系,使用了 SPSS 25 的“复杂样本”工具构建了单变量和多变量二元逻辑回归模型。分析采用了 p 值≤0.05 的显著性水平。
估计有 30.7%的不丹在校青少年使用烟草,25.8%的青少年饮酒,12.7%的青少年使用大麻。父母与子女的联系:(i)孩子的家庭作业监督和(ii)父母对孩子空闲时间的监督,显著降低了使用烟草和饮酒的几率,而父母对孩子问题的理解与受访者的物质使用之间没有显著关联。然而,父母与子女的联系与大麻的使用之间没有发现显著的关联。除了父母与子女的联系外,焦虑、欺凌、被动吸烟、逃学、参与打架或被攻击也与青少年的物质使用显著相关。
父母与子女的联系已被发现是一个重要的因素,可以显著减少不丹青少年的物质使用。然而,对于任何旨在防止全球青少年滥用物质的全球倡议来说,这都是一个重要的教训。