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Teens with strong family bonds are more than twice as Likely to Thrive Socially as Adults


Adults who felt connected to their families as teenagers were more than twice as likely to have strong social bonds with others two decades later, according to research that traces America’s loneliness crisis back to the dinner table.

Researchers tracked over 7,000 Americans from age 16 into their late 30s to find the pattern. Teens with the strongest family bonds had a 39.5% chance of high social connection as adults. Those with the weakest family ties? Just 16.1%. That gap held even after accounting for income, education, and childhood trauma.

The research, published in JAMA Pediatrics, arrives as the country grapples with epidemic loneliness. In 2023, the U.S. Surgeon General called social isolation a public health crisis comparable to smoking 15 cigarettes daily. The damage is everywhere: rising rates of depression and anxiety, increased heart disease risk, and even premature death. These findings suggest the solution actually lies in the past. The relationships teenagers have at home may be the best predictor of whether they’ll feel connected or alone at 40.

What Family Connection Actually Looks Like

When researchers asked 16-year-olds about their family life, they weren’t measuring whether parents enforced curfews or attended soccer games. They asked five questions that captured something more fundamental: Do your parents care about you? Does your family understand you? Do you have fun together? Does your family pay attention to you? Do you feel loved and wanted?

Those questions get at what lead author Robert Whitaker, a pediatrician at Columbia University and Bassett Medical Center, calls feeling “safe and seen.” It’s less about family dinners or screen time rules and more about emotional climate. Can a teenager come home upset and find someone who listens? Do they feel like they matter to the people they live with?

The study followed participants through five survey waves between 1994 and 2018, starting when they were in grades 7-12 and checking back in periodically until they reached their late 30s. The group was roughly half male and half female, about 65% White, 15% Black, 12% Hispanic, and 3% Asian or Pacific Islander.

Mother comforting unhappy sad teenage daughter
Teens were asked if they felt their families understood them. (Credit: fizkes/Shutterstock)

Six Ways to Be Connected as an Adult

In their late 20s and 30s, participants answered questions that researchers used to build a picture of their social lives. Did they regularly spend time with friends, family, or neighbors? Did they have more than two close friends? Did they feel supported by others and avoid feeling isolated? Did they feel close to at least one parent and satisfied in their romantic relationship?

Each yes earned a point. Score four or higher out of six? High social connection. Only about one in four people in the study hit that mark, which lines up with rising isolation rates.

The Pattern Held Across the Board

The researchers split participants into four groups based on their teenage family connection scores. Every step up the ladder corresponded to better adult outcomes: not just overall, but on every single measure.

Adults from tightly connected families were more likely to have close friendships, feel supported, maintain bonds with their parents, and report satisfying romantic relationships. The difference between the top and bottom groups amounted to 23.4 percentage points, even after controlling for a dozen factors, including household income, parental education, whether parents were married, and whether the teen had experienced abuse or neglect.

That’s a significant difference persisting across 20 years and countless life changes: college, first jobs, marriages, maybe kids of their own.

Why This Matters Now

Loneliness among American teenagers has been climbing for years. Social media often gets blamed, and screen time probably plays a role. But this research suggests the roots run deeper. Teenagers who feel disconnected from their families may be learning patterns that follow them into adulthood. They’re not just lonely now; they also may be missing out on building the skills to connect with others later in life.

The flip side is more hopeful. A teenager who feels understood and valued at home isn’t just having a better adolescence. They’re apparently learning something durable about relationships: how to trust, how to open up, how to maintain bonds. Those skills compound over decades.

Whitaker and his colleagues suggest that family connection works like a training ground. When parents can provide stable, nurturing relationships, kids internalize those patterns. The capacity for connection becomes part of how they move through the world.

What Parents and Doctors Can Do

The authors think pediatricians have a role to play, though probably not the one you’d expect. Instead of handing parents a checklist of connection-building activities, doctors might focus on creating a space where parents themselves feel heard and supported. That experience could help parents extend the same feeling to their kids.

This aligns with how evidence-based parenting programs work. Interventions like Circle of Security don’t teach parents to do specific things so much as help them build their own capacity for attuned, responsive relationships. Kids then pick up those relational skills naturally.

For parents worried about whether they’re doing enough, the study offers some reassurance. The questions that mattered weren’t about achievement or activities. They were about presence and attention. Do your kids feel like you care? Do they think you understand them? Those aren’t questions money or busy schedules can fully answer. Plenty of stretched-thin families create that sense of connection, and plenty of well-resourced ones don’t.

Lonely man, social isolation
The U.S. Surgeon General declared social isolation a public health crisis in 2023. (Credit: Andrew Neel from Pexels)

The Long View

Of course, this study can’t prove that family connection causes better adult social lives. Other factors might explain part of the pattern. And researchers acknowledge their measures weren’t perfect: they haven’t been tested against other approaches, and some relied on single survey questions.

Still, the findings align with what many psychologists have argued for years. The relationships we have early in life shape the relationships we build later. If we want to address the loneliness epidemic, we might need to look further back than dating apps or social media algorithms. We might need to look at how teenagers feel when they walk through their own front door.

At a time when adolescent mental health is in crisis and adult isolation is climbing, this research offers a rare piece of good news. The capacity for connection isn’t fixed. It can be nurtured during a specific window, when kids are old enough to be forming their own identities but still deeply shaped by home. And unlike many interventions that require funding or infrastructure, this one asks something simpler: that families create space where teenagers feel they matter.

1 In 3 Young People Hit Their Parents, And Some Keep Doing It Into Their 20s

Picture a 13-year-old shoving their mother during an argument about screen time. A 15-year-old is throwing a phone at their father after being grounded. A 20-year-old is punching a wall inches from a parent’s head during a heated discussion about money. These examples may sound extreme at first, but such occurrences are far more common than most may assume.

Nearly one in three young people reported acts of physical aggression toward their parents at least once across six surveys conducted between ages 11 and 24, according to a 13-year study that tracked more than 1,500 individuals from adolescence into adulthood. Perhaps more alarming: roughly 5% still engage in this behavior at age 24, when they have the size and strength to cause serious harm.

Published in European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, the research sheds light on what experts call “the most understudied form of family aggression in the general population.” While researchers have extensively documented how parents hurt children and partners hurt each other, physical violence flowing upward (from children to parents) has received far less attention. The findings reveal that this hidden family violence follows a predictable pattern, peaks during middle school years, and crosses all demographic lines.

The Middle School Danger Zone

Swiss researchers checked in with the same group of children and their families six times over 13 years, starting when the kids were in first grade. At each point, they asked whether participants had hit, kicked, or thrown objects at their parents in anger during the past year.

The numbers peaked at age 13, when about 15% reported attacking their parents. That’s roughly one in seven middle schoolers. From there, rates dropped steadily through the teenage years and into young adulthood. By age 24, the rate fell to 5%, though that still means this behavior persists for a meaningful subset of young adults.

Males were somewhat more likely to be aggressive toward parents (36% versus 29% for females), but the gap was much smaller than for other types of physical violence, where males typically dominate the statistics. Both sexes followed the same basic pattern: increase during early adolescence, then decline.

The timing makes sense from a developmental standpoint. Early adolescence brings a perfect storm of heightened impulsivity, intense emotions, and family power struggles as teens push for independence. For many families, parent-child conflict spikes temporarily during these years. When teens lack the skills to manage anger and frustration, some of those conflicts turn physical.

angry dad and son
Some young adults continue violent behavior toward parents well into their 20s. (Credit: Freeograph on Shutterstock)

When the Violence Becomes Entrenched

The most troubling finding wasn’t about the overall numbers; it was the persistence. Teens who reported attacking parents at age 15 were 13 times more likely to do it again at age 17. Those who engaged in the behavior at age 17 were 10 times more likely to repeat it at age 20. By their early twenties, those who attacked parents at age 20 were nearly 18 times more likely to continue at age 24.

In other words, while many teens lash out at parents during a difficult developmental period, a subset gets stuck in the pattern. The behavior becomes increasingly stable over time. These young adults represent the highest-risk group, particularly given their physical capabilities. A shove from a 13-year-old differs dramatically from a punch thrown by a 24-year-old.

“Physical youth-to-parent aggression is among the most understudied forms of family aggression in the general population,” the researchers wrote. They noted that in clinical, child-welfare, and juvenile justice settings (where troubled families may eventually find themselves), prevalence rates reach as high as 85%. But until now, few studies have tracked how common the problem is in ordinary families or how it changes over time.

The Childhood Warning Signs

Researchers identified several red flags in childhood that predicted later violence toward parents. ADHD symptoms topped the list. Children showing more signs of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder had 26% higher odds of later attacking their parents, likely because ADHD often involves difficulties with impulse control. Even after accounting for how aggressive kids were in general, ADHD remained a significant risk factor.

Family experiences mattered enormously. Kids who experienced harsh parenting (corporal punishment, yelling, verbal aggression) showed 24% higher odds of later turning that aggression back on their parents. The finding is consistent with the cycle of violence researchers have documented for generations: children who experience aggression learn to use it themselves.

Conflict between parents also played a role. When parents reported significant disagreements with each other during their child’s early years, those children faced 17% higher odds of later parent-directed violence. Growing up in households where conflict goes unresolved teaches kids that aggression is how families handle disagreements.

Children who experienced violence outside the home (serious assaults, for instance) also faced a higher risk. Interestingly, bullying victimization and general school problems didn’t show the same connection. Neither did bullying others, which actually showed a negative relationship, suggesting some kids direct aggression outward at peers rather than upward at parents.

Low self-control, delinquency, and early drinking or drug use all initially appeared risky, but these connections disappeared once researchers accounted for how aggressive kids were overall. In other words, these factors predicted general aggression, not specifically violence toward parents.

What Protects Families

For the first time, researchers also identified protective factors: things that shield families from this type of violence even when other risks are present.

Conflict coping skills made a major difference. Kids who learned to handle disagreements and negative emotions without aggression had 17% lower odds of later attacking parents. When arguments inevitably arise, children need tools beyond their fists to manage anger and frustration.

Involved parenting also protected families. Children whose parents stayed engaged in their lives and activities were 16% less likely to become aggressive toward those same parents. The quality of the parent-child bond appears to matter, not just in the moment but years down the line.

These protective factors helped all kids, not just those already showing aggression. That’s important because it suggests broad prevention efforts, or teaching all children better coping skills and encouraging all parents to stay involved, could reduce violence across families.

It Happens Everywhere

One finding surprised researchers: this type of violence affected families equally across income levels, cultural backgrounds, and family structures. Wealthy families weren’t protected. Neither were families with two parents versus one, nor were families born in Switzerland versus those who immigrated there.

The universality matters. Parent-directed violence isn’t something that only happens in “those” families. It happens in suburban households and urban apartments, in families with advanced degrees and families without, in tight-knit communities and transient ones.

Family, community, hands in hands
Study authors checked in with the same families six times over a span of13 years. (© sewcream – stock.adobe.com)

The Silence Around Family Violence

When people think about family violence, they picture parents hurting children or partners hurting each other. Research on those forms of violence fills libraries. But physical aggression flowing the other direction, from children to parents, rarely makes headlines or drives policy discussions.

The few studies that exist focused on teenagers without following them into adulthood. This research fills that gap by tracking people through age 24. Given that the behavior only stabilizes and persists in a subset of young people, understanding what happens after the teen years matters enormously for targeting interventions.

“Reducing children’s aggressive tendencies and exposure to aggression and conflict, while fostering competent coping skills and supportive family environments, could decrease PYPA and the burden of family aggression,” the researchers concluded. The increasing stability of the violence through the twenties suggests prevention efforts need to start early, before patterns become entrenched during the middle school years when rates peak.


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