Do You Eat Dinner With Your Children?
Eating dinner together sounds so simple and yet, it is not today’s norm. Why? The answer has something to do with hectic schedules, after school activities and other outside influences that interfere with dinnertime. This reality is most unfortunate because research has shown that the more children eat dinner with their families, the less likely they are to smoke, drink or use illegal drugs.
So welcome to Informed Families’ first drug prevention tool of the school year: Family Day. Family Day is a national effort, developed by the Center for Addiction & Substance Abuse at Columbia University, to encourage family dinners as an effective way to reduce youth substance abuse and other risky behaviors. Join us on Family Day, September 26th and learn how to have fun through simple exercises.
