Recognizing Signs of Smoking and Tobacco Use In Our Teens

Recognizing Signs of Smoking and Tobacco Use In Our Teens

If your child is one of the nearly 5 million middle and high school students who are teenage tobacco users, it’s time to intervene to stop this health-harming habit.

First, you need to find out if nicotine has found its way into your troubled teen’s routine, whether they’re smoking cigarettes, vaping or using chewing tobacco.

How To Tell If Your Child Is Smoking Cigarettes

You may discover your teen is smoking by finding cigarettes or lighters among their belongings or noticing their clothes smell like smoke. Other signs your teenager may be smoking include:

  • Bad breath or the obsessive use of gum, mints or mouthwash to ward off bad breath
  • Yellowing teeth
  • A chronic cough or hoarse voice
  • Irritability that is magically alleviated by going outside for a few minutes

Your Teen’s Vaping Habit Is Harder To Detect Than Smoking

Your child may also be among the growing number of adolescents who vape. The use of e-cigarettes or vaping pens among teens rose a staggering 900 percent between 2011 and 2016, according to a 2016 US surgeon general report.

Vaping is harder to detect than cigarette use. Users inhale heated water vapor infused with nicotine instead of tobacco smoke, so it’s odorless. This makes it easier for your teen to secretly vape, even inside their room. The e-juice used with vaping devices can also be infused with tempting flavors like watermelon, another reason for its youth appeal.

Your child may be more likely to try vaping than smoking cigarettes because it’s promoted as healthier than smoking. E-juice contains fewer chemicals than cigarettes, but most are still infused with habit-forming nicotine, so your vaping teen will likely smoke cigarettes if an e-cigarette is unavailable.

The most obvious sign your teen is vaping is finding a vape pen, e-cigarette, e-juice flavor or other paraphernalia among their belongings. If you’re unfamiliar with this technology, browse online for photos of vaping devices. Parents can’t afford to be clueless!

How To Tell If Your Child Is Chewing Tobacco

Many teens fall into another harmful habit: using chewing tobacco or snuff.

Chewing tobacco consists of shredded tobacco leaves that are placed between the cheek and gum. Snuff is finer-grain tobacco, which users place between their lower lip and gum. Users suck on the tobacco juice, sending nicotine into their bloodstream, and spit often to get rid of excess saliva.

Chewing tobacco significantly raises the risk of oral cancer. Other adverse effects include:

  • Cracked or bleeding lips
  • Irritated gums that are red, swollen or bleeding
  • Receding gums, which can lead to tooth loss
  • High blood pressure

Some parents discover their kids are using smokeless tobacco after finding a pouch or container of tobacco among their belongings. Seeing your teen spitting into a cup is another red flag.

Your pediatrician or dentist may be able to tell if your child is chewing tobacco by looking in their mouth for signs like white or red patches on the gums or soft tissue.  

I Found Out My Teen Is Vaping or Using Tobacco, What Now?

Whether your child is smoking cigarettes, chewing tobacco or vaping, they are likely addicted to nicotine. Tell your child to cease smoking or using tobacco, supporting your edict with information about the health risks.

You may also want to investigate further to discover if your teen is also abusing drugs and/or alcohol. Substance abuse poses serious risks to your teen’s health and can exacerbate the parent-child conflicts that come with adolescence.

Your teen may be able to abruptly quit their tobacco use. If they’ve become too dependent on nicotine, you may need to devise a plan such as the deliberate tapering of smoking, vaping or chewing.

Teens who engage in off-limits behavior with regards to tobacco use and vaping may also be struggling with addiction to alcohol and/or drugs. They may also be having trouble with:

  • Mental illness
  • Anger triggers
  • ADD/ADHD
  • An eating disorder
  • Self-harming
  • Risky sexual behavior

If your teen is experiencing major issues you’re unable to cope with alone, you might consider placing them in a therapeutic boarding school.  A therapeutic boarding school is a 24-hour environment that provides a safe haven where your child can work through their challenges.

Learn more at Help Your Teen Now.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

11 Sep, 2018

Recent Posts

Tips for Parents Dealing With Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD)

Reactive attachment disorder (RAD) can be a complicated situation for parents to navigate. This disorder results from a disruption to the all-important bonding process that should take place between children and parents in those early formative childhood years. To...

ADHD: A Parents Guide To Understanding Your Teen

Has your teen recently been diagnosed with ADHD? It could be that you’ve spent years with the wrong diagnosis, not getting your child the right type of therapy needed. ADHD can bring several complexities and challenges for parents and everyone in the family. Learning...

9 Ways Parents of Bipolar Teens Can Help

If your teen has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, you may feel overwhelmed as you consider how you can help. Parenting a bipolar teen can be frustrating and stressful. You must take care of your own needs and avoid blaming yourself for the challenging behavior...

How to Help Your Violent Teen Manage Their Anger

No parent is truly ever prepared to see their teen erupt in violent behavior. Whether the angry behavior is being expressed at school or home, or both, it can lead to a world of confusion and questions for parents who now need to navigate life with a teen prone to...

5 Tips to Find the Right Therapeutic Boarding School

When your teen is struggling with behavioral problems or mental illness concerns, it’s essential to find the best resources to help them find their way back to stability. If you’ve decided to get your troubled teen into a therapeutic boarding school, you must select...

Why Eating Disorders Among Teens Are On The Rise

The pandemic has taken a toll on each of us. For teens, it has almost flipped their world upside down. From missing important sporting events to losing time with friends at parties and sleepovers, teens have struggled immensely. There has been a noticeable increase in...

What Screen Time is Doing To Teens

We live in an increasingly connected world, with an increasing reliance on gadgets in our lives. When was the last time that everyone in your family went a full day without looking at a screen? Screen time is unavoidable, it seems, even for our teens. They need their...

The Most Commonly Used Drugs by Teens

According to several studies conducted over the last decade, there have been declining numbers of teens using illicit drugs. That said, there are still many teens who experiment with, use, and abuse both drugs and alcohol. Their reasonings may vary, and the level of...

Why Are ADHD Rates Rising?

Have a conversation with other parents, and you’ll find that many of them will speak about their children and teens, and even themselves, having been diagnosed with ADHD. It can feel like there are increasing ADHD diagnoses being seen across ages and genders, leading...

You May Also Like…

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *