Pubdate: Mon, 30 Oct 2006 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Joey Thompson, The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) KIDS 'N' CRIME REPORT TELLS HOW TO PREVENT IT Bad Parenting, Lousy Nutrition, Drug Use Among Risk Factors If we want to prevent kids from being devoured by the heady offerings of a criminal life, we can learn a lot from those who spend their time in the country's youth detention centres. Roughly 33,800 youth aged 12 to 17 were admitted to Canada's correctional services in 2004-05. About half were taken into secure or open custody while the rest were placed under the watch of a probation officer. The majority of these teens, whether their crimes were violent or docile, were found to have a lot in common, namely lousy nutrition, learning disabilities, drug use, openness to peer pressure, poorly skilled parents and poor reading skills. Find all six risk factors in one adolescent and you have a recipe for disaster. That, readers, is the tough-love message served up in a report by Vancouver Board of Trade researchers entitled Kids 'n' Crime, on the development and prevention of criminality among children and youth. The good news, the authors are quick to point out, is the debilitating elements that lead to crime-hyped youth are preventable. The bad news is prevention, although cheaper, doesn't attract the same fanfare and public funding as intervention. That's got to change. Studies show that every loonie spent on early-childhood education saves society at least $17 throughout an individual's life. This means governments must be pressured to invest in educational programs for youth, from prenatal through to high school. In fact, according to corrections statistics, 60 per cent of inmates in adult prisons last year were functioning below high school-entrance standards and a whopping 90 per cent functioned below the level of high school completion. "Factors that lead youth to live on the street include poor family cohesiveness, association with street youth, drug use and involvement in the sex trade," the report states. "Often the general precipitating factor is a 'lack' in the youth's life." This deficiency or deprivation could be rooted in poor school grades, possible learning problems, poverty, or emotionally absent parents. "Throughout development from birth to adulthood, the earlier the risk factors are detected and addressed, the greater likelihood that prevention will be successful," the report notes. "The positive impact of risk reduction is potentially far-reaching and should be addressed as a matter of priority." Some have criticized the report as being simplistic, but if the fixes are so elementary, why the heck isn't more being done to make them accessible? It's not rocket science; it's pure common sense. Here are some of the key recommendations: - - Provide parenting education during pregnancy. - - Conduct home visits to identify and remediate potential problems. - - Improve literacy of parents. - - Provide access to quality child care. - - Enhance educators' ability to detect learning disabilities. - - Enhance parents' understanding of the dynamics of adolescence. - - Improve high school-graduation rates. - - Improve access to treatment for youth involved in gambling, drug use and the sex trade. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek