The Dinner Table Project was created by Four Rivers Behavioral Health Regional Prevention Center in 2015 with the basic idea that families that eat together, have better relationships. If children have better relationships with their parents and siblings, they are less likely to try drugs and alcohol. Then we found out that the children of families that share meals together also have better academic performance, higher self-esteem, a greater sense of resilience, lower risk of teen pregnancy, lower risk of depression, lower rates of obesity, and a lower likelihood of developing an eating disorder! The Regional Prevention Center provides FREE Dinner Table Project Materials for the community, contact us today!
The Dinner Table Project offers monthly newsletters with recipes and activities, see the link below for more information:
Website (Subscribe Here!): https://thedinnertableproject.org/