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Therapy Lessens Likelihood of Repeat Violence Among Alcohol-Abusing Teens

Teenagers often show up in emergency rooms of hospitals after drinking and getting injured in fights. Now a new study found that having these teens talk to a therapist for 30 minutes will reduce their chances participating in future physical violence by 70%.

"The leading cause of death for adolescents who reside in inner-city settings is violence and other injuries," said Maureen Walton, lead author of the study. "These adolescents are ... not likely to have a primary care physician, and the emergency room is a popular place for a variety of reasons. We decided this would be a good setting for prevention."

  • Dr. Walton and her colleagues divided more than 700 teens (ages 14 to 18) who had visited an emergency in Flint, Michigan, into three groups.
  • One group got a 30-minute talk with a therapist.
  • The second group sat through a computer presentation.
  • The third group received a brochure with referrals to community resources.

Six months later, those who talked to therapists showed a greater reduction in alcohol consequences compared to the other groups.

The study appears in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
 

Labels: alcohol, violence, therapy

Posted By: Adolescent Substance Abuse

Comments:

Kensington on 8/13/2010
This makes perfect sense. In some ways I think ALL teenagers could use a thirty minute session with a therapist every week (I include myself when I was that age)! There's something of great value to having a neutral party sit there and actually listen to you. If a teenager who is already in a bad place (emergency room, alcohol, fighting) is given an opportunity to have the floor while talking about what they feel, and trust the person who is listening and advising them, that's as valuable as the physical care they receive.