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Family dinners may play a role in reducing teenage alcohol,drug and vaping use.
A new study published in the Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment and Trauma suggests that regularly sharing meals as a family may help discourage substance use among many adolescents, news agency SWNS reported.
The study found that higher-qualityfamily mealswere linked to lower rates of alcohol, cannabis and e-cigarette use for most teenagers.
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For those with more severe adverse childhood experiences, shared meals alone appeared to offer little protection.

Spending time together at family dinners may help protect teens from substance and vaping use.(iStock)
To reach those findings, researchers analyzed online survey data from 2,090 adolescents aged 12 to 17 and their parents from across the United States.
Participants were asked about the quality of their family meals, including communication, enjoyment, digital distractions and logistical challenges.

The survey asked participants about family meal quality and adolescents’ alcohol, vaping and cannabis use over the past six months.(iStock)
Rather than treating all adverse experiences the same, the team weighted each factor according to how strongly it has been linked to substance use in previous research.
higher-quality family mealswere linked to a 22% to 34% reduction in reported substance use.
Margie Skeer, the study’s lead author and a professor at Tufts University, told SWNS that the findings reinforce the importance of routinefamily connection.
“These findings build on what we already knew about the value of family meals as a practical and widely accessible way to reduce the risk of adolescent substance use,” Skeer said.
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She said regular family meals can help create opportunities for consistent communication and parental involvement, which may play a role in reducing risky behaviors over time.

The study found lower substance use among teens with less childhood adversity when family meals were more supportive and engaging.(iStock)
However, the study found that family meals offered limited benefit for adolescents whose adversity scores reached the equivalent of four or more adverse childhood experiences.
“While our research suggests that adolescents who have experienced moresevere stressorsmay not see the same benefits from family meals, they may benefit from more targeted and trauma-informed approaches, such as mental health support and alternative forms of family engagement,” Skeer noted.
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Potential limitations the researchers noted include the study’s cross-sectional design, which means the findings cannot establish cause and effect between family meals and substance use.The use of online recruitment may also limit how broadly the results apply to all families.
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