
Think Twice Before Allowing Your 10-Year-Old to Work
By Glenda Fauntleroy, Contributing WriterFebruary 24, 2009
A new study finds that – despite being responsible enough to
have a job at such a young age – fifth-graders who work are more likely to
exhibit bad health behaviors than their unemployed 10-year-old peers.
Fifth-graders who work are more prone to use alcohol and marijuana and get into
fights, according to the study in the April issue of the American Journal of
Preventive Medicine.
Lead author Rajeev Ramchand, an associate behavioral scientist at the RAND
Corporation, and his colleagues interviewed 5,147 fifth-graders who lived in
three large cities — Birmingham, Los Angeles and Houston — as part of the
Healthy Passages study conducted between 2004 and 2006.
The students reported whether they had held a job in the past 12 months, how
many hours they worked and what kind of work they did.
Twenty-one percent of the fifth graders said they had a job, with babysitting
(16.7 percent) and yard work (24.4 percent) the most common.
Ramchand said the proportion of fifth-graders who reported having a job
initially surprised him and his colleagues, but added, “When we saw that over
half of the kids who reported having a job worked only one to two hours per
week, and mostly doing chores such as yard work and cleaning, this number did
seem sensible.”
The study also looked at how many of the fifth-graders acknowledged delinquent
behavior in the last month, such as using alcohol (4 percent) or marijuana (1
percent), being in a fight (52 percent) or running away from home (3 percent).
Those who held a job were 2.2 times more likely to use tobacco, 1.7 more times
to drink alcohol and 3.1 times more likely to smoke pot than those who did not
have jobs were.
The authors suggested that one reason for the fifth-graders’ behavior is that
those who work might “have more unsupervised time” to engage in delinquent
behavior and drug use.
“A few studies among older youth have found that the degree to which parents
monitor their children’s behavior tends to lessen when their kids start
working,” Ramchand said.
Supervision is key, agreed Jeanie Alter, the program manager and lead evaluator
of the Indiana Prevention Resource Center at Indiana University’s School or
Health, Physical Education and Recreation.
“It is important for parents to monitor the workplace, activities and
associates of their working children,” Alter said. “It is also critical to
set parameters with the child's employer, such as limiting access to alcohol and
prescription drugs in the home where the child is babysitting. Assuring that
children will spend their extra money on positive purchases is also
important.”
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FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: hbns-editor@cfah.org
or (202) 387-2829.
American Journal of Preventive Medicine: Contact the editorial office at
(858) 457-7292 or eAJPM@ucsd.edu
Ramchand R, et al. Substance use and delinquency among fifth graders who have
jobs. Am J Prev Med 36(4), 2009.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Center for the Advancement of
Health
Health Behavior News Service
Contact: Lisa Esposito, Editor
202.387.2829
hbns-editor@cfah.org