
Decision strategies to reduce teenage and young adult deaths in the United States.
This article uses decision analysis concepts and techniques to address an extremely important problem to any family with children, namely, how to avoid the tragic death of a child during the high-risk ages of 15-24. Descriptively, our analysis indicates that of the 35,000 annual deaths among this age group in the United States, approximately 20,000 could be avoided if individuals chose readily available alternatives for decisions relating to these deaths. Prescriptively, we develop a decision framework for parents and a child to both identify and proactively pursue decisions that can lower that child's exposure to life-threatening risks and positively alter decisions when facing such risks. Applying this framework for parents and the youth themselves, we illustrate the logic and process of generating proactive alternatives with numerous examples that each could pursue to lower these life-threatening risks and possibly avoid a tragic premature death, and discuss some public policy implications of our findings.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Young Adult
- United States
- Suicide
- Substance-Related Disorders
- Strategic, Defence & Security Studies
- Sex Factors
- Risk-Taking
- Risk
- Public Policy
- Parents
Citation

Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Young Adult
- United States
- Suicide
- Substance-Related Disorders
- Strategic, Defence & Security Studies
- Sex Factors
- Risk-Taking
- Risk
- Public Policy
- Parents