Adolescent Parenting Introduction

From parents' perspectives, adolescence could quite possibly be the most nerve-wracking developmental period in their children's lives. It is natural for parents to feel anxious when their teens learn to drive a car; begin to form romantic and sexual relationships; decide to get tattoos and body piercings; and flirt with danger by experimenting with alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs. Despite these perils, adolescence is also a period of great pride and satisfaction for parents as they begin to recognize that their years of hard work, commitment, and personal sacrifice have paid off. Their once dependent children gradually become independent and responsible adults. Along the way there are significant landmarks such as their teen getting a first job; choosing a career or trade; moving out to live on their own; and developing a rewarding social network.
The adolescent developmental period is a lengthy period of transition spanning the ages of 12-24 years. During adolescence a m...More
Fast Facts: Learn! Fast!
What are the nutritional requirements in adolescence?
- Despite the abundant supply of food in the United States, most adolescents do not receive adequate nutrition at a time when their bodies' growth and development is accelerating.
- In general, adolescent diets include too much fat, sugar, caffeine, and sodium and not enough nutrient-dense foods such as fresh fruits and vegetables and calcium-rich foods such as dairy products.
- Sedentary 12-year-old males need about 1800 calories each day. This peaks at 2600 calories around age 19-20 years old and then decreases to 2400 calories a day from ages 21 through 24 years.
- Sedentary teen girls around the ages of 12-13 years need about 1600 calories per day, and their daily calorie requirement reaches the highest level around age 19 years at 2000 calories.
- Not only do adolescents need to eat the right amount of food, but they also need to eat foods which contain the right type of nutrients, and in the right proportions.
- There are four key methods parents can use to assist their youth to develop healthy eating habits: 1) provide nutritional information, 2) provide opportunities to practice making healthy choices,3) model healthy eating habits, and 4) ensure the availability of quick, convenient, nutrient-rich snacks.
- Nutritional problems can still arise or worsen during adolescence including problems of overeating and/or consistently making poor food choices, resulting in obesity; developing problems with unhealthy and extremely restrictive dieting without meeting the minimum nutritional requirements necessary for healthy growth and development; and Diabetes.
What are the physical activity requirements in adolescence?
- It is important for adolescents to develop habits that incorporate regular physical activity into their daily lives so that these habits are carried into adulthood.
- It can be difficult for youth to get sufficient exercise due to the increased popularity of sedentary entertainment (television, video games, etc.) and a decrease in physical education opportunities at school.
- Any physical activity that requires the body to move enables youth to reap the health benefits of exercise.
- Many youth enjoy playing organized, competitive sports such as basketball, cheerleading, baseball, gymnastics, football, golf, tennis, soccer, lacrosse, track and field, etc.
- Youth can also receive the benefits of exercise by participating in regular physical activity through informal and unstructured activities, such as gardening, shooting hoops in the driveway, dancing in their bedroom with their friends, riding bicycles around the neighborhood, skateboarding at the skate park, walking the dog after dinner, or hiking on a trail in the woods.
- Parents need to be informed about the training methods used by their children's coaches and trainers, and ensure their teens take certain precautions to prevent sports-related injuries.
- Youth should be spending at least one hour a day, most days of every week, engaged in some form of physical activity.
- The best way parents can encourage their teens' participation in regular physical activity is by modeling this behavior themselves.
- Parents can also help their children by assisting them to find physical activities that match their children's interests and talents.
How important is sleep in adolescence?
- Adolescents need an average 8.5 to 9.25 hours of sleep every night just to function.
- Teens' bodies' natural sleep rhythms (called circadian rhythms) shift during adolescence causing them to remain alert and awake later in the night, with a corresponding desire to sleep later in the day.
- Parents can help teens to identify and limit caffeinated beverages in the evening.
- Teens should establish regular sleep and wake times that allow for an adequate amount of sleep each night.
- Teens will also benefit from developing and maintaining a consistent bedtime routine.
- Beyond bedtimes and bedtime routines, youth should learn to structure their time so that important activities do not detain them from getting to bed on time.
- It is best to avoid strenuous exercise like running, aerobics, weight lifting, or playing basketball right before bed, as these types of activities will release hormones into the body that cause people to feel more awake and alert.
- Anxiety and worry are great sleep disrupters and prevent youth from feeling sleepy.
- Chronic sleep disturbance (sleeping too much or sleeping too little) can be a symptom of a more serious problem such a depressive disorder, or drug and alcohol use.
What topics might parents and adolescents disagree about or need to discuss?
- During early and middle adolescence (roughly ages 12-17) parents and teens often argue about clothing.
- Parents can use these decisions about clothing purchases as an opportunity for youth to learn valuable lessons about finances and budgets.
- Before youth finish high school, parents need to decide whether they will be providing their youth any financial assistance during their transition to independent living.
- Parents still have an important role regarding their youths' health and hygiene.
- Teens will need to care for their skin in news ways, such as taking precautions to limit acne and other skin blemishes, and to avoid excessive sun exposure and/or other unsafe tanning practices.
- Wearing makeup, dying hair, and getting a tattoo or a body piercing are all ways that youth experiment with enhancing their personal appearances.
What healthcare is important during adolescence?
- Adolescents will need to learn to manage their own healthcare and should be developing a healthy lifestyle that will be maintained throughout their adult lives.
- Parents will want to ensure their youth continue to receive routine, annual physical examinations.
- Annual physicals are the perfect time to make sure that youth are caught up on their vaccinations.
- It's also important that youth also receive routine dental and vision check-ups.
- Annual physical exams should also be screening adolescents for behavioral health concerns such as depression; anxiety; or possible problems with tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs.
- Parents have an important role in identifying the early warning signs of a behavioral or emotional problem because they regularly observe their teens' behavioral and emotional patterns.
- Parents should be on the look-out for possible warning signs that their child may be at risk for suicide.
- All adolescents who are sexually active should get regularly tested for sexually transmitted infections including but not limited to HIV/AIDS, syphilis, gonorrhea, Chlamydia, and Hepatitis B.
- They key to empowering youth to independently manage their own healthcare is to gradually give youth more and more control over their healthcare, while teaching them the skills they need for self-care.
What discipline, love and guidance is necessary during adolescence?
- One of the difficulties of raising teenage children is achieving the right balance between love and discipline; liberties and limitations; and, independence and responsibility.
- Parents should help children to become resilient, which means that they have the ability to "bounce back" or to readily recover from painful, stressful, and difficult experiences.
- One thing parents can do to build resilience is to provide the proper amount of support and guidance.
- When parents are overly protective to the point of being smothering, or provide too much direction without letting youth work out some problems on their own, they rob youth of the opportunity to develop and practice independent problem-solving skills.
- Youth should have an understanding of what privileges are available to them for following the rules and meeting expectations, and what consequences will occur when they fail to follow the rules, or make poor choices.
- Parents can begin to help adolescents develop time management skills by having high (but attainable) expectations for school achievement, household chores, and other important activities.
- Family rules should also establish clear expectations about the responsibilities of family members toward each other.
- If parents become aware of activities or rules at another child\'s home that they do not agree with, they should calmly discuss their concerns with the parents of the other child.
- Parents need to express clear rules and expectations around teen substance use.
- By late adolescence (18 years of age and older), parents need to set clear boundaries about any assistance they will (or won't) provide while their children are becoming independent adults.
How can parents protect an adolescent's health and safety?
- Parents must be fully aware of the risks and dangers associated with tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs.
- While parents cannot completely prevent their children's eventual exposure to alcohol and other drugs, there are steps parents can take to reduce the potential risks.
- Parents will want to ensure their youth learn to drive safely and always use good judgment when operating a motor vehicle.
- There are several warning signs parents should pay attention to that could indicate that their adolescent may be a victim of dating violence.
- If parents are concerned about their teens' involvement with fighting or gang activity, they can do several things.
- Teens can encounter all types of violence online, including violent videos, hate messages on blogs and in chat rooms, and violent computer games. Youth who are curious about sex can find plenty of pornography on the Internet, some of which depicts sexual acts coupled with violence.
- Bullying is the repeated abuse, hostility, aggression, manipulation, or violence between two youth where one youth possesses greater power than the other.
- Parents can ensure their children's continued safety by providing education about making their new dorm, apartment, or home the safest it can be.
- Youth also need to make sure they know how to protect themselves while they are traveling in public places.
News Articles
As More Legal Pot Dispensaries Open, More Young Adults Start Using
As more states legalize marijuana and more shops begin to sell it, more young adults are using pot and developing drug-use disorders, a new study finds. More...
Shorter COVID Quarantine for College Athletes a Good Idea, Study Finds
After SARS-CoV-2 exposure, a 14-day quarantine is standard among university athletes. But shorter quarantines for these athletes, along with mid-quarantine testing, may improve their compliance without increasing the risk that they'll infect others, a new study suggests. More...
3 Steps Could Nearly Eliminate COVID Infections on College Campuses: Study
A combination of mask use, social distancing and routine testing would eliminate nearly all COVID-19 infections on U.S. college campuses, a new study claims. More...
College Campuses Are COVID 'Superspreaders,' Study Finds
U.S. colleges could be COVID-19 superspreader sites, and the first two weeks of classes are the most dangerous, researchers warn. More...
AHA News: Registries Could Offer Insight Into COVID-19's Impact on College Athletes' Hearts
Researchers are soon expected to release initial findings from a national cardiac registry of NCAA athletes who have tested positive for COVID-19, giving hope to health care professionals trying to better understand the impact of the disease on the heart. More...
45 MoreYouth Vaping Triples Odds for Adult Smoking
Vaping may not be a way for kids to avoid the smoking habit, after all. A new study finds that teens who start vaping are three times more likely to smoke cigarettes in adulthood than those who never started with electronic cigarettes. More...
Stressed Out in Lockdown, America's Young Adults Are Overeating
When the coronavirus pandemic started, many people began baking banana bread and sourdough loaves at home. Stress eating is nothing new, and 2020 was a year filled with angst for a lot of people. More...
Vaping May Addle the Adolescent Brain
The study, of thousands of U.S. teens, found that those who vaped were three times more likely than their peers to report problems with concentration, memory and decision-making. More...
With Pot Rules Relaxed, More U.S. Teens Driving While High: Study
Almost half of teenagers who regularly use pot admit they've gotten behind the wheel while stoned, a new study in JAMA Network Open reveals. More...
Be Alert to Early Signs of Eating Disorders, Pediatricians' Group Says
A leading pediatricians' group says families often spot eating disorders too late -- and offers new guidelines to reach an earlier diagnosis. More...
After Years of Increases, Teen Vaping Rates Take a Tumble
Reversing years of steady increases, the percentage of U.S. high school students who vape has taken a big turn downward -- from 27.5% in 2019 to 19.6% in 2020, according to new government data. More...
Pandemic Has Cut Into College Kids' Drinking, Study Shows
There's been a large drop in drinking among U.S. college students who went home because of the COVID-19 pandemic, a new study finds. More...
Nearly Half of Teens Get Behind the Wheel Shortly After a Concussion
Driving is a high-risk behavior for teenagers under ordinary circumstances, but new research shows that many who have experienced a concussion may be returning to the road too soon. More...
U.S. Teen Vaping Rates Are Leveling Off But Still High
After years of increases, nicotine and marijuana vaping among U.S. teens plateaued this year, but still they remain high, researchers report. More...
Depression in Youth Ups Odds for Adult Illnesses: Study
Having depression during childhood or in the teen years appears to increase the odds of illness and early death later on, researchers say. More...
'Body Issues' Raise Depression Risks for Teens
Body dissatisfaction significantly increases teens' risk of depression, researchers say. More...
Youth Vaping Rates Have Plunged During Lockdown: Study
Vaping among teens and young adults has decreased dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic, with two-thirds of e-cigarette users reporting that they've either cut back or quit, a new study says. More...
Football-Loving States Drop The Ball on Concussion: Study
States with strong football cultures have often fumbled measures to protect young players who've suffered concussions, researchers say. More...
Teen Smoking Rates Drop, E-Cig Use Rises: Study
American teens' use of tobacco cigarettes and smokeless tobacco has dropped to record lows, even as their use of electronic cigarettes increased, new research shows. More...
Vaping Lures Teens to Smoking: Study
Instead of being a safe alternative to smoking, vaping may serve as an enticing gateway to the cigarette habit for some teens, new research shows. More...
U.S. Sets Another Daily Record for COVID Cases as Virus Spreads on College Campuses
As the daily U.S. coronavirus case count shattered yet another record on Thursday with 121,000 infections reported, a new survey shows that nearly a quarter of a million COVID-19 cases have now been identified at colleges and universities nationwide. More...
1 in 3 High School Seniors Who Misuse Prescription Opioids Turn to Heroin
Among high school seniors, nearly a third of those who misuse prescription opioids use heroin by age 35, a new study shows. More...
Vaping and Lung Damage in Teens: What's the Real Link?
The purported link between e-cigarettes and lung damage might be more complicated than first thought, a new study reports. More...
Depressed Teens May Struggle in School
By about age 16, teens diagnosed with depression have substantially lower educational attainment, a new British study finds. More...
America's COVID Pandemic Is Now Skewing Younger
Young adults in their 20s now account for more cases of COVID-19 than any other age group, according to a new study from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More...
Teens Aren't Turning to E-Cigarettes to Quit Smoking
Most teens who vape aren't looking to quit smoking, a new study of Twitter suggests. This finding belies Juul's claim that its e-cigarette is improving smokers' lives, the researchers said. More...
Suicide Rate Keeps Rising Among Young Americans
A nearly 60% jump in suicides by young Americans since 2007 has experts alarmed and somewhat puzzled. More...
COVID Hits Young Adults Harder Than Thought: Study
New research suggests that COVID-19 is far from benign when it strikes young adults: Once they are hospitalized, 1 in 5 wind up in the ICU and many need ongoing medical care even after they are free of the virus, scientists report. More...
Colleges in 50 States Seeing COVID Cases on Campus
Just weeks into the fall semester, universities and colleges in all 50 states are now struggling to contain the spread of coronavirus on their campuses. More...
Almost 14 Million U.S. Adults Vape, With Use Rising Fastest in Young
The number of Americans using electronic cigarettes is soaring, especially among youth, a new study finds. More...
Teens, Seniors Are Often Driving the Least Safe Cars
Seniors and teens are more likely to drive vehicles that lack important safety features, a new study finds. More...
Harmful Flame Retardants Detected in College-Classroom Dust
Indoor spaces often contains harmful chemicals, say researchers who found high levels of toxic flame retardants in the dust of some U.S. college classrooms. More...
As Colleges Battle COVID Outbreaks, Fauci Warns Them Not to Send Students Home
Colleges across America struggled to control coronavirus outbreaks on campus, even as Dr. Anthony Fauci warned on Wednesday that sending students home after an outbreak is "the worst thing you could do." More...
Online Therapy, Coaches Help Ease Eating Disorders
Most college students with an eating disorder never seek treatment, but more than 8 in 10 were willing to try a new treatment that combines digitally guided therapy with coaching assistance, a new study reports. More...
Thousands of COVID Cases Already Turning Up on College Campuses
Just weeks after colleges across the United States reopened their campuses for the fall semester, thousands of coronavirus infections are cropping up in students and staff alike. More...
Teen Pot Use Makes a Comeback After Legalization
Steady reductions in teen marijuana use in Washington state may have been disrupted by legalization of the drug, a new study suggests. More...
COVID Spread Among Students Prompts UNC to Return to Online Teaching
In a potential harbinger of what could unfold on college campuses across the United States this fall, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill said Monday it will revert back to online teaching after testing showed a rapid spread of coronavirus among students. More...
Nearly Half of U.S. Teens Who Vape Want to Quit
Addictive e-cigarettes have made inroads among American teens, and government campaigns to prevent vaping among the young are everywhere. But a new survey suggests another focus: Helping teens already hooked on vaping to quit. More...
Frequent COVID Tests Key to College Reopening: Experts
Regular testing to catch "silent" COVID-19 spread among students will be key to safely reopening colleges this fall, campus infection control experts say. More...
Mental Health Woes Spiraled Among College Students Early in Pandemic
Depression, anxiety and inactive lifestyles are all too common among college students, and a new study finds they may have escalated during the initial outbreak of COVID-19. More...
What Parents Need to Know About Teens and Concussions
Concussion symptoms aren't always evident, so parents of student-athletes need to know the signs and seek a diagnosis if their teen gets hurt, experts say. More...
College Students Will Need COVID Tests Every 2-3 Days for Campus Safety: Study
College students would need to be tested for COVID-19 infection every two to three days for campuses to safely reopen this fall, a new analysis concludes. More...
Flavored-Cigarette Ban Led to Smoking Decline Among Young Americans
Banning flavored cigarettes led to a large decline in smoking among U.S. teens and young adults, a new study suggests. More...
Dangerous 'Drunkorexia' Hits College Campuses
When students diet, exercise or purge to purposely offset calories they consume from alcohol, experts sometimes call this "drunkorexia." More...
Ad Displays in Stores Boost Teen Vaping Rates: Canadian Study
Canadian provinces that allow retail displays promoting e-cigarettes had nearly three times the teen vaping rate, a new study found. More...
Cyberbullies and Their Victims Can Both Develop PTSD
Cyberbullying among teenagers is estimated to range from 10% to 40%, said the researchers. Because it can be done anonymously day or night, it poses special risks, they noted. More...
Up to 60% of Teens in Some U.S. Schools Used E-Cigs: Study
More than 1 in 10 middle and high school students in the United States used e-cigarettes within the last month, according to a University of Michigan study that found the rate in some schools is as high as 60%. More...
Juul-Type E-Cigarettes May Be Especially Addictive for Teens: Study
Talk to a teacher if you want an idea of how addicted teenagers can become using Juul and other pod-based e-cigarettes. More...
What to Know If You're Headed to College With Asthma or Allergies
If you're off to college in the fall and have allergies or asthma, it's not too soon to figure out how you'll manage them. More...
Proms Gone, Graduations Online: Pandemic Cancels Kids' Rites of Passage
COVID-19 is stealing all the pomp and circumstance from end-of-year celebrations for this year's high school and college graduates. More...
Resources
Articles
- Adolescent Parenting Introduction
- Healthy Teens: Food, Eating & Nutrition During Adolescence
- Teenage Caloric Requirements
- Nutritional Guidelines for Teens
- How Can Parents Help Teens to Develop Healthy Eating Habits?
- Common Nutritional Challenges for Teenagers: Adolescent Obesity
- Common Nutritional Challenges for Teenagers: Eating Disorders and Unhealthy Dieting
- Common Nutritional Challenges for Teenagers: Adolescent Diabetes
- Adolescent Diabetes Continued
- Healthy Teens: Exercise and Sports
- Healthy Teens: Sleep
- Parenting Teens: Clothing Clashes, Housing Decisions, & Financial Management
- Parenting Teens: Skincare, Cosmetics, Tattoos, & Piercings
- Caring for Teens: Healthcare for Teens and Young Adults
- Parenting Teens: Discipline, Love, Rules & Expectations
- Parenting Teens: Discipline, Love, Rules & Expectations
- Discipline and Guidance: Early to Middle Adolescence
- Discipline and Guidance: Early to Middle Adolescence: Time Management and Family Commitments
- Discipline and Guidance: Early to Middle Adolescence: Socializing, Dating and Driving
- Discipline and Guidance: Older Adolescents and Young Adults (18 Years and Older)
- A Parent’s Guide to Protecting Teens’ Health and Safety
- A Parent's Guide to Protecting Teens' Health & Safety
- Understanding the Risks of Adolescent Drug Use: Part II
- What Can Parents Do to Prevent Teenage Alcohol and Drug Use?
- Steps Parents Can Take to Protect Their Children from Alcohol and Other Drug Use
- Steps for Parents: Part II
- Driving Privileges and Safe Driving Practices for Young Drivers
- Parental Guidelines for Teen Driving Privileges: The Family Driving Contract
- Protecting Teens from Abusive Relationships and Dating Violence
- Protecting Teens from Teenage Fights, Gang Violence, Exposure to Sexual Predators and Graphic Internet Violence
- Protecting Teens from Teenage Bullying
- Protecting Adolescent Safety: Independent Living
- Personal Security While in Public Places
- Adolescent Parenting Summary & Conclusion
- Adolescent Parenting: References & Resources
News
- As More Legal Pot Dispensaries Open, More Young Adults Start Using
- Shorter COVID Quarantine for College Athletes a Good Idea, Study Finds
- 3 Steps Could Nearly Eliminate COVID Infections on College Campuses: Study
- College Campuses Are COVID 'Superspreaders,' Study Finds
- AHA News: Registries Could Offer Insight Into COVID-19's Impact on College Athletes' Hearts
- Youth Vaping Triples Odds for Adult Smoking
- Stressed Out in Lockdown, America's Young Adults Are Overeating
- Vaping May Addle the Adolescent Brain
- With Pot Rules Relaxed, More U.S. Teens Driving While High: Study
- Be Alert to Early Signs of Eating Disorders, Pediatricians' Group Says
- 40 more
- After Years of Increases, Teen Vaping Rates Take a Tumble
- Pandemic Has Cut Into College Kids' Drinking, Study Shows
- Nearly Half of Teens Get Behind the Wheel Shortly After a Concussion
- U.S. Teen Vaping Rates Are Leveling Off But Still High
- Depression in Youth Ups Odds for Adult Illnesses: Study
- 'Body Issues' Raise Depression Risks for Teens
- Youth Vaping Rates Have Plunged During Lockdown: Study
- Football-Loving States Drop The Ball on Concussion: Study
- Teen Smoking Rates Drop, E-Cig Use Rises: Study
- Vaping Lures Teens to Smoking: Study
- U.S. Sets Another Daily Record for COVID Cases as Virus Spreads on College Campuses
- 1 in 3 High School Seniors Who Misuse Prescription Opioids Turn to Heroin
- Vaping and Lung Damage in Teens: What's the Real Link?
- Depressed Teens May Struggle in School
- America's COVID Pandemic Is Now Skewing Younger
- Teens Aren't Turning to E-Cigarettes to Quit Smoking
- Suicide Rate Keeps Rising Among Young Americans
- COVID Hits Young Adults Harder Than Thought: Study
- Colleges in 50 States Seeing COVID Cases on Campus
- Almost 14 Million U.S. Adults Vape, With Use Rising Fastest in Young
- Teens, Seniors Are Often Driving the Least Safe Cars
- Harmful Flame Retardants Detected in College-Classroom Dust
- As Colleges Battle COVID Outbreaks, Fauci Warns Them Not to Send Students Home
- Online Therapy, Coaches Help Ease Eating Disorders
- Thousands of COVID Cases Already Turning Up on College Campuses
- Teen Pot Use Makes a Comeback After Legalization
- COVID Spread Among Students Prompts UNC to Return to Online Teaching
- Nearly Half of U.S. Teens Who Vape Want to Quit
- Frequent COVID Tests Key to College Reopening: Experts
- Mental Health Woes Spiraled Among College Students Early in Pandemic
- What Parents Need to Know About Teens and Concussions
- College Students Will Need COVID Tests Every 2-3 Days for Campus Safety: Study
- Flavored-Cigarette Ban Led to Smoking Decline Among Young Americans
- Dangerous 'Drunkorexia' Hits College Campuses
- Ad Displays in Stores Boost Teen Vaping Rates: Canadian Study
- Cyberbullies and Their Victims Can Both Develop PTSD
- Up to 60% of Teens in Some U.S. Schools Used E-Cigs: Study
- Juul-Type E-Cigarettes May Be Especially Addictive for Teens: Study
- What to Know If You're Headed to College With Asthma or Allergies
- Proms Gone, Graduations Online: Pandemic Cancels Kids' Rites of Passage
Questions and Answers
Book & Media Reviews
Links
Videos
- Addressing the Rise of Teen Suicide
- Feeling down? Let's talk - Prevention of suicide among adolescents
- Teen Drug Use: 2014 Monitoring The Future Survey Results
- NPW 2017: Suicide and Substance Use in Young People
- Are We Feeding Early Puberty
- Why Teens Are Attracted to Vaping
- Is My High School Student Ready for College? (And Is My College Student Ready to Go Back?)
- Advice to Parents | Drugs & College 101
- Teen Depression Screening
- Let’s talk about depression – focus on adolescents and young adults
- 48 more
- The Flu Shot- Who Really Gets It
- Child Development: Stepping Stones - Lesson 21: Adolescence: Biosocial Development
- Child Development: Stepping Stones - Lesson 22: Adolescence: Cognitive Development
- Child Development: Stepping Stones - Lesson 24: Adolescence: Summary
- Are Your Kids Addicted to Social Media?
- Is My Child Too Young to Get the HPV Vaccine?
- Do Boys Need the HPV Vaccine?
- The Perils of Adolescence
- What Are The Signs of Depression in Teens?
- Tackling Concussions
- Adolescent Risk-Takers: The Power of Peers
- Energy Drink Sparking More ER Visits
- Children and Social Media: What Every Parent Should Know
- Drugs: Shatter The Myths
- The Impact of Changing Social Behaviors on Teen Drug Use
- The Sound of Your Voice
- Teen Substance Use
- Youth Suicide Risk
- Take Healthy Habits to College
- What Boys Want to Know About Puberty
- Am I Normal (Girls and Puberty)
- Money Tips for Millennials
- E-Cigarette Use in Middle and High School Students
- Teens Using E-cigarettes More Likely to Start Smoking Tobacco
- Tips For Teens With Diabetes: Be Active
- Help Teens Lower Their Risk for Type 2 Diabetes
- Adolescence: Preparing for Lifelong Health and Wellness
- Back to School: A Good Night's Sleep
- How to Talk to Teens: A Developmental Approach
- Bedtime Wake Up Call
- Game Change! Focus on Families - Engaging Young Adults and Their Families
- Endocrine System
- Behavioral Health on College Campuses
- Notebook: Sexual Harassment
- Flu Shots: Young Adults Need Immunity
- Most Teens Need a Rest
- Screen Time vs. Bedtime
- What is Puberty? Decoding Puberty in Girls
- All About Boys Puberty
- Inside Puberty: What Are the Stages of Puberty?
- Puberty Explained - What Is Happening To Your Body?
- Another Reason for Teens to Eat Their Vegetables
- Dangers of E-Cigarettes
- HPV Vaccine: A Pediatrician’s Recommendation
- Healthy Weight
- Getting through to your teenager with ADHD
- Back-to-School: A Time to Think about Health & Academics
- Impact of Cyberbullying: Addressing the Needs of Children and Youth
Topics
Related Topic Centers
Addictions
Aging & Elder Care
Assessments & Interventions
Career & Workplace
Emotional Well-Being
Life Issues
Parenting & Child Care
Abuse
ADHD: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Adoption
Autism
Child & Adolescent Development: Overview
Child & Adolescent Development: Puberty
Child Development & Parenting: Early (3-7)
Child Development & Parenting: Infants (0-2)
Child Development & Parenting: Middle (8-11)
Child Development & Parenting:Adolescence (12-24)
Child Development Theory: Adolescence (12-24)
Child Development Theory: Middle Childhood (8-11)
Childhood Mental Disorders and Illnesses
Childhood Special Education
Divorce
Family & Relationship Issues
Intellectual Disabilities
Learning Disorders
Oppositional Defiant Disorder
Parenting
Self Esteem
Psychological Disorders
Anxiety Disorders
Bipolar Disorder
Conversion Disorders
Depression: Depression & Related Conditions
Dissociative Disorders
Domestic Violence and Rape
Eating Disorders
Impulse Control Disorders
Intellectual Disabilities
Mental Disorders
Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders
Personality Disorders
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Schizophrenia
Sexual Disorders
Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders
Suicide
Tourettes and other Tic Disorders