How to Coach Yourself and Others Coaching Families | Page 47
The Family Profile of a Drug-Abusing Adolescent
Research shows that many adolescent behavior problems have common causes and that families, in
particular, play a large role in those problems in many cases (Szapocznik and Coatsworth 1999). Some of
the family problems that have been identified as linked to adolescent problem behaviors include:
Parental drug use or other antisocial behavior
Parental under- or over-involvement with the adolescent
Parental over- or under-control of the adolescent
Poor quality of parent-adolescent communication
Lack of clear rules and consequences for adolescent behavior
Inconsistent application of rules and consequences for adolescent behavior
Inadequate monitoring and management of the adolescent's activities with peers
Lack of adult supervision of the adolescent's activities with peers
Poor adolescent bonding to family
Poor family cohesiveness
Some adolescents may have families who had these problems before they began using drugs (Szapocznik
and Coatsworth 1999). Other families may have developed problems in response to the adolescent's
problem behaviors (Santisteban et al. in press).
Because family problems are an integral part of the profile of drugabusing adolescents and have been linked
to the initiation and maintenance of adolescent drug use, it is necessary to improve conditions in the youth's
most lasting and influential environment: the family. BSFT targets all of these family problems.
The Behavioral Profile of a Drug-Abusing Adolescent
Adolescents who need drug abuse treatment usually exhibit a variety of externalizing behavior problems.
These may include:
School truancy
Delinquency
Associating with antisocial peers
Conduct problems at home and/or school
Violent or aggressive behavior
Oppositional behavior
Risky sexual behavior
Negativity in the Family
Families of drug-abusing adolescents exhibit high degrees of negativity (Robbins et al. 1998). Very often,
this negativity takes the form of family members blaming each other for both the adolescent's and the
family's problems. Examples might include a parent who refers to her drug-abusing son as "no good" or "a
lost cause." Parents or parent figures may blame each other for what they perceive as a failure in raising the
child. For example, one parent may accuse the other of having been a "bad example," or for not "being
there" when the youngster needed him or her. The adolescent, in turn, may speak about the parent accused
of setting a bad example with disrespect and resentment. The communication among family members is
contaminated with anger, bitterness, and animosity. To the BSFT counselor, these signs of emotional or
affective distress indicate that the work of changing dysfunctional behaviors must start with changing the
negative tone of the family members' emotions and the negative content of their interactions. Research
shows that when family negativity is reduced early in treatment, families are more likely to remain in
therapy (Robbins et al. 1998).
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