You’ve dropped your daughter off at her friend’s house and while cleaning the car, you find what looks like a USB drive on the passenger seat. It’s a disposable vape.
You’ve seen the news. Vapes or e-cigarettes are harmful yet increasingly popular with people her age.
You call to ask if the vape’s hers. It is and she’s been vaping occasionally for a few weeks. You say you’ll talk about it later.
But what will you actually say?
Read more: Should I give my teen alcohol? Just a sip, the whole can, or none at all?
1. Know your facts
It’s important to be across accurate and up-to-date information about vaping. Evidence-based resources for parents and carers in Australia include:
the Lung Foundation’s evidence-based resources
factsheets, videos and webinars from NSW Health that help dispel any misconceptions parents might have about vaping. This includes whether vapes are likely to contain nicotine and the accuracy of labelling
Quit Victoria’s resources for parents and teens, including brief guides that cover the essentials on vaping, including busting a few myths.
A common theme across such resources for parents is to bring home the reality of vaping in terms of how many teens are actually doing it, what current health evidence shows, and why it’s more than just media coverage of incidents at schools.
In a nutshell, vapes are easy to access, teen vaping is common and it’s becoming normalised in this age group.
Our own unpublished research with young people aged 16-26, provides some insights. We’ve heard vaping called a “clean alternative” to smoking (it’s not), and a “social activity” at school or parties. One young participant has seen others “nic sick”, or nauseous from vaped nicotine.
There’s mounting evidence pointing to physical health harms and unknown mental health risks from vaping. There’s no reason for a teen to be vaping, even if adults might take this approach in quitting smoking. Many vapes contain nicotine, whatever the label says, with the potential for dependence or addiction.
Read more: How can we reverse the vaping crisis among young Australians? Enforce the rules
2. Listen more than speak
It might be tempting to deliver a lecture on the dangers of vaping. But conversations are more likely to be effective if they are clear, open, and constructive, with thought about how to focus on discussing health harms.
So use some of these tips, based on ones from the Alcohol and Drug Foundation:
approach the conversation calmly, during a shared activity, such as walking the dog
consider questions your teen may ask, and how you want to respond
don’t assume, avoid accusations, show trust
no judging; really listen to their perspective (listen more than speak) and respect they have a different and unique worldview and opinions. Understand their social life and create an environment where they can discuss this with you
don’t exaggerate, just stick to the facts. Remember, your teen may have already received vaping and health resources from school and be aware of the health impacts and uncertainties about long-term health risks of vaping
tailor your discussion based on whether your teen vapes occasionally, is addicted and/or wants support to quit
respect their privacy
show that their health is your focus.
Read more: A parent's guide to why teens make bad decisions
3. Support quitting
But what if it’s gone beyond trying vaping, and your teen feels they have a dependency or addiction?
Services such as Quitline, which traditionally provide counselling for people wanting to stop smoking, are increasingly receiving calls from teens struggling with vaping-related nicotine dependence.
Parents can also call Quitline (phone: 13 78 48) to plan the conversation with a teenager about vaping. They can also contact a GP to help their teen treat nicotine dependence and related effects.
Extra resources about vaping for parents and teens are available in New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia, Tasmania, Australia Capital Territory and Northern Territory.
Joshua Trigg receives funding from the Medical Research Future Fund, Flinders Foundation and The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre. He is a member of the Australasian Professional Society on Alcohol and other Drugs and Public Health Association of Australia. He has previously worked for Cancer Council South Australia.
Billie Bonevski receives funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council, the Medical Research Future Fund, NSW Ministry of Health, the Hospital Research Foundation SA, Flinders Foundation. She is currently on the Executive Board of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco (SRNT) as Member Delegate for Asia, Africa, Oceania and Latin America.
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.