While previous studies have indicated that parental use of prescription drugs facilitates addiction through availability, it would also be valuable to see if parental use of such drugs normalizes seeking pharmaceutical solution to problems on a psychological level. This could be determined through an attitudinal questionnaire following the fill-in-the-blank yes/no demographic questionnaire in the survey. The attitudinal questionnaire can prompt agreement to disagreement with statements on a 1-5 scale such as: "Because they are prescribed by doctors to some people, prescription medications are not as dangerous as illegal drugs." "I feel less guilty about taking prescription drugs, even though they are not prescribed to me, because they are not illegal for everyone." Or "I feel that because my parents take these drugs, they cannot be entirely bad for me."
One interesting issue that is by the fact that girls more than boys abuse all kinds of prescription drugs, both sedatives as well as simulative medications, is the question of the specific reasons prescription medications may be abused (Teens and prescription drugs, 2007, Office of Drug National Drug Control Policy, p.5). Previous research has indicated greater concerns about social compliance in girls regarding behavior, and the use of prescription drugs might be one method of circumventing these taboos. Asking questions such as "did you receive strong anti-drug messages at home/at school" or...
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