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Family Update, Online!

Volume 06  Issue 38 20 September 2005
Topic: Family Day & Dinner Together

Family Fact: Frequent Family Dinners

Family Quote: Family Day

Family Research Abstract: Around the Family Dinner Table

Family Fact of the Week: Frequent Family Dinners TOP of PAGE

"This report, The Importance of Family Dinners, which draws from the results of CASA's tenth annual back to school survey, finds that, compared to teens who have five or more family dinners per week, teens who have two or less are:

• three times likelier to try marijuana; 

• two and a half times likelier to smoke cigarettes; and 

• more than one and a half times likelier to drink alcohol.

...This year, 58 percent of teens report having dinner with their family at least five times a week, a substantial increase in family dining from the 1998 CASA survey, when the relationship of frequent family dinners to substance abuse risk was first measured. That's the good news. But the news could be a lot better: 

• Overall, about one-quarter of teens and half of parents desire more frequent family dinners. 

• About half of the teens and almost all of the parents who have fewer than three dinners with their families in a typical week would like to have more frequent family dinners."

(Source:  Joseph A. Califano, Jr., "Accompanying Statement," The Importance of Family Dinners II, CASA Family Day, The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, September 2005; http://www.casafamilyday.org/PDFs/FamilyDinnersII.pdf .)

Family Quote of the Week: Family Day TOP of PAGE

"On Family Day, we affirm our commitment to strengthening America's families and supporting them as they work to raise healthy and responsible children.

Strong families help young people take responsibility, understand the consequences of their actions, and recognize that the decisions they make today could affect the rest of their lives. By spending time with their children, parents prepare them to realize a bright future.

... Families instill the essential values we live by. By supporting them, we make America a better and more hopeful place.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim September 27, 2004, as Family Day. I call on the people of the United States to observe this day by engaging in activities that honor the relationship between parents and children and help keep our young people healthy and safe."

(Source:  George W. Bush, "Family Day, 2004, By the President of the United States of America: A Proclamation," The White House, September 24, 2004; http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/09/20040924-6.html .)

 

Editor's note:  This years' Family Day is September 26, 2005.  -Karl John Shields

For More Information TOP of PAGE

The Howard Center and The World Congress of Families stock a number of pro-family books, including The Family: America's Hope, with essays by Michael Novak, Harold M. Voth, James Hitchcock, Archbishop Nicholas T. Elko, Mayer Eisenstein, Leopold Tyrmand, Joe J. Christensen, Harold O.J. Brown, and John A. Howard. Please visit:

    The Howard Center Bookstore   

 Call: 1-815-964-5819    USA: 1-800-461-3113    Fax: 1-815-965-1826    Contact: Bookstore 

934 North Main Street Rockford, Illinois 61103

Family Research Abstract of the Week: Around the Family Dinner Table TOP of PAGE

In an era of maternal employment and marital disintegration, fewer and fewer teenagers share their meals with their families.  Indeed, when a team of researchers from the University of Minnesota recently surveyed 4746 adolescents from ethnically and economically diverse neighborhoods in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, they found only about "one fourth (26.8%) reported eating 7 or more meals with their family in the past week, and almost one third (33.1%) reported eating family meals only 1 to 2 times per week or never."  What is more, as the Minnesota scholars examined their survey results closely, they discerned a number of bad adolescent outcomes linked to infrequent eating of family meals-especially among teenage girls.  The pathological teen tangle associated with the disappearance of family meals has now been reported in a study appearing in the Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine.

By systematically parsing their data, the Minnesota scholars establish that compared to peers who regularly eat their meals with their families, adolescents of both sexes who seldom or never eat with their families are more likely to use tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana, more likely to receive low grades in school, more likely to suffer from depression, and more likely to think about suicide.  In addition to these negative outcomes, distinctively weak self-esteem and distinctively high likelihood to actually attempt suicide was observed among adolescent girls who rarely or never ate meals with their families.  Because of the gravity of the finding on likelihood of a suicide attempt, the researchers underscore the point: "girls reporting more than 7 family meals per week were almost half as likely to report a suicide attempt compared with girls eating no family meals." 

Of course, some of the protective effect of eating meals with the family might be interpreted as the natural consequence of overall family closeness.  And, in fact, the Minnesota researchers limn a statistical link between family meal frequency and "family connectedness" (p < 0.001).  However, when the researchers deployed a sophisticated statistical model that made separate allowance for reported "family connectedness," teenagers of both sexes who seldom or never ate meals with their families were still especially likely to use tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana and more likely to suffer from depression (p < 0.05 for all four outcomes).  In the same statistical model that controlled for "family connectedness," teenage girls who seldom or never ate meals with their families were also particularly likely to earn low grades, and to both think about and attempt suicide (p < 0.05 for all three additional outcomes). The persistence in this statistical model of family mealtime as a predictor of behavioral and psychological outcomes indicates to the researchers that "eating meals as a family has benefits for young people above and beyond their general sense of connection to family members."   

So durable is the link between teenagers' not eating meals with their families and their experiencing adverse consequences that even when the researchers took separate statistical account of family connectedness, parents' marital status, school level, race, and socioeconomic status, their statistical models still showed that teenage boys who seldom or never ate meals with their families were distinctively at risk to smoke and use alcohol (p < 0.05 for both outcomes) and that teenage girls who seldom or never ate meals with their families were particularly likely to use alcohol and marijuana and to suffer from depression (p < 0.05 for all three outcomes).

In trying to explain why teens who do not eat with their families are so vulnerable to psychological problems, so likely to engage in risky or even self-destructive behaviors, the Minnesota researchers reason that "family meals may ... provide a formal or informal 'check-in' time during which parents can tune in to the emotional well-being of their teens, particularly girls.  Likewise family mealtimes may serve as a marker for young people spending more time at home and away from negative peer influences or youth culture more generally."

In underscoring the potential importance of family mealtime for "a broad range of health domains," the authors of the new study highlight the statistical evidence that family meals serve as "a potentially protective factor in the lives of adolescents for nearly all of [the] variables [investigated], particularly among adolescent girls."  Given that it is adolescent girls who are most at risk when family meals stop, readers of this new study may detect some unpleasant irony in the fact that such meals have become infrequent in modern America largely because of the effects of the feminist movement.

(Source: Marla E. Eisenberg et al., "Correlations Between Family Meals and Psychosocial Well-being Among Adolescents," Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine 158 [2004]: 792-796.)
 

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