Pubdate: Wed, 08 Sep 1999 Source: Illawarra Mercury (Australia) Copyright: Illawarra Newspapers Contact: http://mercury.illnews.com.au/ Author: Louise Turk PEER PRESSURE 'DYNAMITE' Peer group pressure was dynamite when it came to drugs and young people, a public forum heard yesterday. Trevor Crowe, clinical director of the Berkeley-based treatment centre Kedesh House, said even children and teenagers from supportive families were at risk of being led astray by peers. ``If you come from the most closely bonded, caring family with good crisis management skills and end up with an unhelpful or negative peer group you can still develop alcohol and drug problems,'' Mr Crowe said. Parents could minimise the risk of their child being adversely influenced by being good communicators, taking an active interest in their child and improving homelife. ``If parents don't know where their kids are, who they are with, and what they are up to, then that becomes a risk,'' he said. ``Part of adolescence is to break away from family and explore and develop an individual identity. Peer groups may be attractive because home is not a very pleasant place to be.'' Mr Crowe, who spoke at the Illawarra-Shoalhaven Drug and Alcohol Summit public forum, said young people often felt they were not listened to and did not have a voice at home, or they were being dominated. ``On the one hand, parental neglect and not knowing where kids are is a risk factor but the opposite is also a risk,'' he said. Parents also had to look at underlying reasons as to why peer groups might be attractive to their child, such as personality factors and mental health issues. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea