Pubdate: Fri, 30 Mar 2007 Source: Hanover Post, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2007, Osprey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.thepost.on.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2612 Author: Mary Golem RELATIONSHIPS CITED AS KEY TO DRUG PREVENTION AT SEMINAR Chesley - Developing meaningful relationships is key to adolescent well-being and according to a professor of Psychology and Psychiatry at the University of Toronto may also be one of the keys in helping teens avoid becoming substance abusers. Dr. David A. Wolfe, the Director of the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Centre for Prevention Science, believes so strongly in the importance of healthy relationships for teens - with their peers, their teachers and especially their parents - he and his colleagues are promoting the "fourth R." "We have the three R's in school - reading, 'riting and 'rithmetic," he said, "but now we need the "fourth R." The "fourth R" is a comprehensive, school-based initiative for reducing adolescent violence and related risk behaviours by educating them on what a positive, healthy relationship really is. Wolfe was guest speaker at a drug awareness forum in Chesley on Tuesday. Entitled Dazed & Confused: A Forum to Help Parents & Professionals Understand the Risks of Drug Use in Grey/ Bruce, the all-day seminar attracted about 100 educators, youth and social workers, parents and police officers from across Grey-Bruce. "Given the recent attention to crystal methamphetamine, many parents are increasingly concerned with the issue of drug use," said one of the organizers Linda Yenssen of Public Health and the Grey Bruce Focus Committee. "This is the first time we've opened something like this up to parents . . . it is important that we keep everyone on the same page." The day-long session included a morning panel discussion examining the local drug scene, the effects drugs can have and the resources available to help those who are addicted, and the afternoon session with Dr. Wolfe. "There are no simple solutions, no magic pills to solve the problems," Wolfe said, after hearing during the morning session that although crystal meth use is "becoming increasingly popular and is something users can become become quickly addicted to, alcohol abuse remains the number one drug in Grey-Bruce," according to Constable Jeff Mercey of the South Bruce OPP. In an Ontario-wide survey of high school students in 2005, 62 per cent reported regular binge drinking, with 63.7 per cent of Grey-Bruce students - the majority of them under the legal drinking age - saying they regularly drink excessively in one sitting. "Crystal meth and alcohol are competing against each other in popularity," Mercey added, saying, "the users of both are the ones who lose." His comments were echoed by another member of the panel, Dave Roy of the Choices counselling service for youth, who told those in attendance "youth drinking is starting at an earlier age," saying 13-19-year-olds reported the highest percentages of binge drinking in Ontario. "And again, Grey-Bruce numbers were higher than the provincial average." Like Wolfe, Roy encouraged workshop participants to connect and listen to the teens. "Adolescents wish their parents knew what was happening in their life, but they don't want to tell them," Wolfe said. "They want their parents to understand what it's like to be them . . . kids show us the problems they have, they don't necessarily have the problem," he said, adding sometimes bullying at school or an unstable home environment are the reasons teens turn to substances "to try and rid themselves of the problem. They adapt to what works . . . they don't know what else to do." That's why Wolfe is such a proponent of the "fourth R" relationship teaching. "Having a healthy relationship with friends, parents and teachers you can trust can make all the difference to a teen who is uncertain about things. "Strengthen those relationships and you'll strengthen the teen," he added, and thus end or at least reduce the circle of risky behaviour which includes alcohol and drug use, sexual behaviour and violence. Dating violence, for example, increases 20-fold when alcohol and drugs are involved. "Kids today are getting so many mixed messages . . . they need to know there are choices, they need to know the facts and they need people they can depend on to help them." "Intimacy and relationships are major developmental tasks for teens . . . they have to learn how to relate, need to understand peer and gender differences and do all that when their brains have not fully developed in that reasoning area of the brain," Wolfe said. "Girls grow up seeking connection and boys grow up seeking status. They don't know how to relate to each other and often fall back on images seen on TV - most of them gender stereotypes and sexually explicit - as their source of information. That's why having a good relationship, with open communication, is so important." "Early to mid-adolescence is a battleground," Wolfe acknowledged, with teens facing pressures to conform and yet be individuals at the same time. "The fourth 'R' uses a show it-practice it-get feedback approach with teens, as opposed to lecturing. The only solution is relationship building and, through that, education." Such relationship building needs to begin in pre-teen years to be effective, Wolfe added, as he encouraged workshop participants to "help your child by building a healthy relationship with them." A balance of sensitivity and firmness is essential, Wolfe said, adding "parents should never questions you don't want to hear answers to." He encourages open, honest dialogue with teens and says parents need to use the resourcefulness of other parents, school officials and community agencies to develop healthy relationships with their teens. Wolfe also encouraged "harm reduction as opposed to zero tolerance," saying it is unrealistic to think teens will not experiment. He also stressed the importance of an authoritative, not authoritarian approach with teens and said special effort should be made to accentuate the positive. "Acknowledge the pressure your teen may be under," he said, stressing the need for parents to be active participants in their teens' lives. "Teens appreciate knowing the limits and above all, they appreciate knowing others - especially those close to them - care about them." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek