Teenagers in distress: a social and health-based approach to youth malaise
Recommendation 1632
(2003)
- Author(s):
- Parliamentary Assembly
- Origin
- Text adopted by the
Standing Committee, acting on behalf of the Assembly, on 25 November
2003 (see Doc. 9986, report
of the Social, Health and Family Affairs Committee, rapporteur:
Mr Ouzký; and Doc. 10000,
opinion of the Committee on Culture, Science and Education, rapporteur:
Mr Shybko).
- Thesaurus
1. The Parliamentary Assembly is concerned
that young people in Europe are increasingly engaging in behaviour
likely to put their health and lives at risk. Such behaviour includes
smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, illegal drug use, eating
disorders and unprotected sexual activity. Other dangerous activities include
self-strangulation, “trainsurfing” and crossing motorways, undertaken
in the search for intense, exhilarating feelings. Most young people
are well aware of the danger such behaviour poses for their health and
lives.
2. Also worrying is the rise in the rate of suicide among young
people, which in many European countries represents the second most
frequent cause of death among teenagers, after road accidents.
3. Young people have their own reasons and motivations for engaging
in such behaviour. Nevertheless, the increase in risk-taking activities
indicates growing distress among young people in general.
4. In view of the rapidly changing social and economic environment,
young people face an insecure and unpredictable future. In particular,
high youth unemployment makes it difficult for them to integrate
through the labour market. Alternative experience such as voluntary
or community work should be encouraged.
5. The deterioration of social institutions and networks is one
characteristic of the transformation of the social order. Former
vehicles for social integration such as the family, the church,
schools and trade unions have gradually lost their traditional influence.
As the path into adulthood is no longer predictable, young people have
to find their own way. The Assembly considers that the supportive
role of the family, in particular, should be strengthened as the
primary influence in fostering the successful integration of young
people and that the member states should promote policies in line
with this objective.
6. Young people in Council of Europe member states have to face
specific changes and challenges in their societies. They have poor
support networks and often lack adequate access to health care and
information. These problems need to be addressed.
7. A major problem for young people in central and eastern Europe
is the explosive increase of sexually transmitted diseases, especially
HIV/Aids. Low levels of awareness, deteriorating health care systems,
poverty and high unemployment rates are all conditions fostering
the rapid spread of the epidemic. Other signs pointing to the distress
of young people in this region are rising suicide rates and increasing
alcohol consumption.
8. The transition from childhood to responsible adulthood is
a time when young people need strong support to manage this transition
successfully and develop their capacities for “life management”.
In recent decades this transition process has become longer and
more complex. In order to manage the transition successfully, young
people must be exposed to an extensive range of life experiences.
These experiences should include formal education and training;
opportunities for wide-ranging social contact, recreation and travel
- including abroad; opportunities to achieve and develop their talents;
but also access to advice and counselling in a friendly and supportive
environment.
9. In order to strengthen the ability of young people to cope
with the uncertainty and unpredictability of their future, programmes
to foster resilience should be made an integral part of general
youth policies.
10. The Assembly therefore recommends that the Committee of Ministers
invite the member states:
10.1 in
consultation with the relevant youth organisations, to pay greater
attention to all forms of risk-taking behaviour among young people
and provide for appropriate prevention and support measures in their
national and regional youth policies;
10.2 ito co-ordinate their child, youth and family policies
with a view to preventing risk-taking behaviour through the establishment
of strong and reliable social networks;
10.3 to promote policies designed to strengthen the role of
parents in fostering the successful social integration of young
people;
10.4 to devise or set up:
a information
and awareness campaigns for young people on the dangers to which
they are exposed through tobacco, alcohol and drug consumption or
abnormal dietary habits;
b health education programmes, backed by better training
for teaching and medical staff, to promote general health, mental
health and sexual health;
c suicide-prevention programmes;
d violence prevention and awareness campaigns for young
people;
e prevention facilities, such as drop-in centres or advice
booths, in particular outside the school environment, so that counsellors
may hear teenagers’ pleas for help and defuse crises;
f provisions for emergency intervention, particularly within
the hospital sector;
g programmes designed to reduce the possibility of relapse;
h measures to reduce the social cost of alcohol and tobacco
consumption, including higher taxation on these products, and to
bar minors from obtaining them;
i strengthened drug prevention programmes for minors;
10.5 to seek the support of the mass media in pursuing the
above objectives.
11. The Assembly also recommends that the Committee of Ministers:
11.1 instruct the relevant bodies
of the Council of Europe dealing with health matters to consider
young people as a particularly vulnerable group;
11.2 promote closer co-ordination between the youth, social
cohesion, education and family law sectors in the Council of Europe
in order to ensure the coherence of policies on children, youth
and the family;
11.3 establish guidelines for dealing with the risk-taking
behaviour of young people, including methods for improving their
resilience;
11.4 aunch programmes to establish institutionalised support
directed specifically at young people in Council of Europe member
countries in the areas of health care, information and prevention;
11.5 further research the causes of, and recent trends in,
risk-taking behaviour among young people.