Violence plays a major roll in
the death of teenagers. The leading cause of teenager
deaths is accidents, most of which are car accidents;
many of these involve the use of drugs and alcohol.
Homicide is the other cause of death for teens
aged 10 to 14 and suicide is the also cause of
death in this age group.
A recent survey shows the first conclusive proof
that there is a cause-and-effect connection between
teens exposed to violence and their own violent
tendencies.
Factors like sex, race, family status, and economic
position, researchers tried to force some teenagers
towards violence. While all of these factors contributed
to violence, researchers found that kids exposed
to gun violence were two times more likely to
become perpetrators of violence.
Violence can be in many forms like verbal harassment,
verbal terrorization, blocking one’s access
to escape and the physical like hitting, choking,
biting, sexual abuse, use of a weapon, murder,
and suicide. It may engage teens as victims or
perpetrators as well as their families, school
officials, strangers, or others. Homeless teens
are more involve, particularly those from minority
backgrounds.
Clinicians and researchers normally say that
violence in humans is the result of some factors
like introduction to violence in the home and
exposure to media violence. Many teenagers are
embarrassed easily and are liable to involvement
in fights. This can cause considerable harm to
themselves and others.
Violent behavior may reproduce a need of some
teenagers to experiment and try new things. The
result may be high-risk behavior, such as drug
experimentation, fast or dangerous driving, and/or
criminal behavior. Additionally, if the teenager
has observed violence their home, school or work
environment, they are more likely to commit it.
Make your home as safe a place
There should be no guns in a home. If you feel
that guns are necessary, then remove their locks
and keep them unloaded and unlocked. Guns and
ammunition should be kept separate and safely
hidden. Study your home and look for other ways
to keep it safe.
Decrease the level of violence in home
Teens learn patterns of violence in homes and
then repeat these patterns throughout their lives.
If there are such members in family who cannot
or will not stop violence, help them. Do not bear
any bullying behavior you see in your kids. Teach
them that they must respect to others and allow
them to observe you.
Help your teen to avoid drug abuse
Teach your kids that the use of drugs is element
of the violence in our society. When kids are
using drugs, they place themselves in such a situations
where violence is more likely to take place. If
drug abuse is increasing, family members should
be concerned in a therapy program that can assess
the drug use and offer effective healing.
Limit exposure to violence in the media
Kids learn from media violence that might is right,
that a more powerful person can and should control
others, and that violence is an appropriate response
to life’s problems. Teach your kids to have
a specific purpose when turning on the TV. Watch
television shows or movies with your kids as long
as they let you, so you can see what they are
watching and can counteract the false and negative
instructions they may be receiving.
Reduce violence in the Workplace
Consider whether your youth’ work places
are safe environments for them. For example, if
they work alone at certain jobs they may be subject
to assault, robbery and even murder. Parents do
have a right to know and should find out about
their junior work conditions.
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