What Actually Protects Teens From Substance Use?
What Actually Protects Teens From Substance Use?
Research is clear on what protects teens from substance use: they're most protected when strong boundaries are paired with strong connection.¹ Clear expectations matter—and so does a relationship where your teen feels safe telling you the truth. Here's how to build both.
Does talking about drugs put the idea in their head?
No. By the time your kid is a teenager, they're already exposed—through peers, media and social media. The question isn't whether substances will come up in their world. The question is whether your voice will be in the conversation.
The research is consistent: kids whose parents talk to them honestly about substances—without fear or shame—are less likely to use substances.² The conversations themselves are protective.
Why do teens use substances in the first place?
When teens use substances, there's usually a reason: to fit in, to manage stress, to quiet anxiety, to sleep, to feel something. Adolescence is the period when identity is being constructed, and substances are one of the things being offered as a way to figure out who they are and where they belong.
This is why warnings alone don't work. A teen with a strong sense of belonging, purpose and connection has more reasons to protect themselves. But cultivating those things is slow, demanding work—not a single conversation or a simple fix.
What makes some teens more vulnerable?
A few things show up consistently in the research:³
Teens who don't feel they can talk to their parents about what's actually going on in their lives
Teens who haven't heard explicitly where their parents stand on substance use
Teens without strong connections to trusted adults beyond their parents
Teens with untreated anxiety, depression or other mental-health challenges
What can parents do?
Lead with curiosity. Ask what they're seeing and what their friends are talking about. Asking about peers often opens up more honest conversation than asking your teen directly about their own behavior.
Set clear expectations, with warmth. Be explicit about what you don't want them doing and why—and pair those boundaries with a close, supportive relationship. Teens are most protected when firm rules and genuine warmth go together. Parents often assume their kid knows where they stand. They usually don't, unless you've said it out loud.
Model the behavior you want to see. Kids watch how the adults around them handle stress, alcohol, conflict and hard days. Your own habits are part of the lesson.
Help build their identity and connections. Support the relationships, activities and interests that give your teen a sense of who they are—teams, jobs, creative work, faith communities, friendships. Just as important, make sure they have other trusted adults to turn to: a coach, a relative, a teacher, a family friend. Both take time to develop, and both are among the most protective things in a teen's life.
Build resilience together. Help your teen make a plan for what they'll do when life gets hard—who they can talk to, how they calm down, where they can turn for support. Kids are more protected when they learn to move toward connection, not away from it, in difficult moments.
Keep the door open—and lead with safety. Say out loud that even if things have gone badly—even if they've done something they're ashamed of, even if they're in a situation they don't know how to get out of—the line is still open. Let them know their safety is your top priority.
Give them an exit. Talk through what they'd say if someone offers them something. Agree on a code—a text or emoji they can send you—to get pulled out of a situation without losing face.
Keep showing up. This isn't one conversation. It's many small ones, over years.
Sources:
¹ Pettigrew, Jonathan, Michelle Miller-Day, Young Ju Shin, Janice L. Krieger, Michael L. Hecht, and John W. Graham. "Parental Messages about Substance Use in Early Adolescence: Extending a Model of Drug Talk Styles." Health Communication 33, no. 3 (2017): 349–358. doi:10.1080/10410236.2017.1283565. — and Nelson, Candace. "The 4 Types of Parenting Styles: What Style Is Right for You?" Mayo Clinic Press, May 10, 2023.
² Pettigrew, Jonathan, Michelle Miller-Day, Young Ju Shin, Janice L. Krieger, Michael L. Hecht, and John W. Graham. "Parental Messages about Substance Use in Early Adolescence: Extending a Model of Drug Talk Styles." Health Communication 33, no. 3 (2017): 349–358. doi:10.1080/10410236.2017.1283565. — and Nelson, Candace. "The 4 Types of Parenting Styles: What Style Is Right for You?" Mayo Clinic Press, May 10, 2023.
³ Youth.gov. "Risk and Protective Factors." U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. — and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Substance Use Among Youth."
References:
Dr. Christina Bethell, Professor, Johns Hopkins University, Nova Institute Scholar, Director, Center for Early and Lifelong Flourishing
Dr. Keith Humphreys, Esther Ting Memorial Professor, Stanford University School of Medicine
Dr. Dolly Klock, Family Medicine Physician, Founder, Adolessons
Dr. Fred Muench, Clinical Psychologist & Researcher, Co-Founder & CEO, Clear 30
Dr. Jill Pearson, Board-Certified Pediatrician, President, Pathways Pediatric Consulting
Rhana Hashemi, M.S., Founder, Know Drugs, Ph.D. Candidate, Stanford University
Marcia Lee Taylor, Founder, MLT Strategies, Former President & CEO, Partnership for Drug-Free Kids



