If you are a business wanting to schedule multiple employees, please call the pharmacy at 870-423-2094 instead of using the website scheduler.

ATTENTION ALL MEDICARE CUSTOMERS:

Significant Changes to Medicare Part D Plans in 2024 that can affect you!

~ WE ARE LIMITED ON THE PLANS WE CAN TAKE ~

Learn how Economy Drug is addressing these changes – click here to read more.

Manténgase sano!

  • By Robert Preidt HealthDay Reporter
  • Posted April 13, 2022

Family Structure Influences Teen Delinquency

The structure of teens' families influences their risk of delinquent behaviors such as shoplifting, graffiti or robbery, new research suggests.

For the study, the researchers analyzed survey data gathered between 2016 and 2019 from more than 3,800 14- and 15-year-olds in Sweden. They used a statistical measure called incident rate ratio, or IRR, to compare groups.

"This study shows that it is important to move on to the use of more detailed categorizations of family structure in relation to delinquency, and to increase our knowledge about the group of adolescents that moves between parents, and especially about the different constellations of asymmetrical and symmetrical living arrangements," the authors concluded in the report published online April 13 in PLOS ONE.

Compared to teens who lived with a mother and father, delinquent behavior was more common among those who lived with a single father (IRR: 1.898); a single mother (IRR: 1.661); a father and stepmother (IRR: 1.606); or a mother and stepfather (IRR: 2.044).

An IRR of 2, for example, means the rate is twice as high, explained study authors Robert Svensson, a professor of criminology, and Björn Johnson, a professor of social work, at Malmö University in Sweden.

The risk of delinquent behavior was also higher among teens with only one parent who had a new partner, the investigators found.

But many of the associations between family structure and risk of delinquency decreased when researchers accounted for parental attachment and monitoring.

Previous studies have found that teens who don't live with both parents are at higher risk for delinquent behaviors. But those studies tended to overly simplify family living arrangements, such as only comparing living with both parents versus not living with both parents, the study authors noted in a journal news release.

More information

The American Academy of Pediatrics explains the teen brain.

SOURCE: PLOS ONE, news release, April 13, 2022

El servicio de noticias de salud es un servicio para los usuarios de la página web de Economy Drug gracias a HealthDay. Economy Drug ni sus empleados, agentes, o contratistas, revisan, controlan, o toman responsabilidad por el contenido de los artículos. Por favor busque consejo médico directamente de un farmacéutico o de su médico principal.
Derechos de autor © 2024 HealthDay Reservados todos los derechos.