Important Elements of Substance Abuse Prevention Programs



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Important Elements of Substance Abuse Prevention Programs Research Based Prevention Principles (NIDA, 2003, pp. 2-5) PRINCIPLE 1: Prevention programs should enhance protective factors and reverse or reduce risk factors. 14 PRINCIPLE 2: Prevention programs should address all forms of drug abuse, alone or in combination, including the underage use of legal drugs (e.g., tobacco or alcohol); the use of illegal drugs (e.g., marijuana or heroin); and the inappropriate use of legally obtained substances (e.g., inhalants), prescription medications, or over-the-counter drugs. 16 PRINCIPLE 3: Prevention programs should address the type of drug abuse problem in the local community, target modifiable risk factors, and strengthen identified protective factors. 14 PRINCIPLE 4: Prevention programs should be tailored to address risks specific to population or audience characteristics, such as age, gender, and ethnicity, to improve program effectiveness. 21 PRINCIPLE 5: Family-based prevention programs should enhance family bonding and relationships and include parenting skills; practice in developing, discussing, and enforcing family policies on substance abuse; and training in drug education and information. 2 PRINCIPLE 6: Prevention programs can be designed to intervene as early as preschool to address risk factors for drug abuse, such as aggressive behavior, poor social skills, and academic difficulties. 30,31 PRINCIPLE 7: Prevention programs for elementary school children should target improving academic and social-emotional learning to address risk factors for drug abuse, such as early aggression, academic failure, and school dropout. Education should focus on the following skills: Self-control; Emotional awareness; Communication; Social problem-solving; and Academic support, especially in reading. 8,15 PRINCIPLE 8: Prevention programs for middle or junior high and high school students should increase academic and social competence with the following skills:6, 25 Study habits and academic support; Communication; Peer relationships; Self-efficacy and assertiveness; Drug resistance skills; Reinforcement of anti-drug attitudes; and Strengthening of personal commitments against drug abuse. 6,25 PRINCIPLE 9: Prevention programs aimed at general populations at key transition points, such as the transition to middle school, can produce beneficial effects even among high-risk families and children. Such interventions do not single out risk populations and, therefore, reduce labeling and promote bonding to school and community. 6,10 PRINCIPLE 10: Community prevention programs that combine two or more effective programs, such as family-based and schoolbased programs, can be more effective than a single program alone. 3 PRINCIPLE 11: Community prevention programs reaching populations in multiple settings for example, schools, clubs, faith-based organizations, and the media are most effective when they present consistent, community-wide messages in each setting. 7 PRINCIPLE 12: When communities adapt programs to match their needs, community norms, or differing cultural requirements, they should retain core elements of the original research-based intervention which include: Structure (how the program is organized and constructed); Content (the information, skills, and strategies of the program); and Delivery (how the program is adapted, implemented, and evaluated). 27 PRINCIPLE 13: Prevention programs should be long-term with repeated interventions (i.e., booster programs) to reinforce the original prevention goals. Research shows that the benefits from middle school prevention programs diminish without follow-up programs in high school. 25

PRINCIPLE 14: Prevention programs should include teacher training on good classroom management practices, such as rewarding appropriate student behavior. Such techniques help to foster students positive behavior, achievement, academic motivation, and school bonding. 15 PRINCIPLE 15: Prevention programs are most effective when they employ interactive techniques, such as peer discussion groups and parent role-playing that allow for active involvement in learning about drug abuse and reinforcing skills. 6 PRINCIPLE 16: Research-based prevention programs can be cost-effective. Similar to earlier research, recent research shows that for each dollar invested in prevention, a savings of up to $10 in treatment for alcohol or other substance abuse can be seen. 1,13,23,26 Summary of Research on Preventing Drug and Alcohol Use and Abuse Risk and protective factors operate in various domains and settings and intervention in these domains can affect this process. The following chart provides an illustration of this (NIDA, 2003, p. 7): Risk Factors Domain Protective Factors Early aggressive behavior Individual Self-control Lack of parental supervision Family Parental monitoring Substance abuse Peer Academic competence Drug availability School Anti-drug use policies Poverty Community Strong neighborhood attachment Effective programs seek to reduce the following risk factors (Hawkins, Kosterman, Magun, Catalano, & Arthur, 1997; National Center for Mental Health Promotion and Youth Violence Prevention, 2004; NIDA, 2003): Alienation, isolation, & lack of social bonding Favorable attitudes toward tobacco, alcohol or other drugs, and delinquency Early initiation of tobacco, alcohol, or other drug abuse or early onset of violent behavior Early and persistent antisocial behavior Academic failure (poor class room behavior) Individual Poor social skills Sensation seeking Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), especially when combined with aggressive behaviors or conduct disorders Alienation from dominant social values, rebelliousness Peer Friends who abuse tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs. Friends who engage in violence Family modeling of drug use behavior Favorable parental attitudes toward the abuse of tobacco, alcohol, or other drugs, or violence Family conflict Lack of attachment and nurturing by parents or care givers Poor academic performance Harsh or arbitrary student management practices, such as a lack of shared norms for behavior, and inconsistent or poorly articulated expectations for learning and behavior Availability of tobacco, alcohol or other drugs, or weapons on school premises Availability of tobacco, alcohol and other drugs Availability of firearms Family Family management problems, such as lack of clear expectations of behavior, failure of parents to monitor their children, and excessively severe or inconsistent punishment Extremely authoritarian or permissive parenting practices School Delinquent peer culture, such as friends or peers who are involved in criminal activity Ineffective administrative leadership Little emotional and social support of students Violence in schools Community Community norms that favor substance abuse, firearms, and crime Poverty 2

Although risk factors may be present, protective factors balance and buffer risk factors and reduce each child s vulnerability. Prevention strategies focus on reinforcing protective factors through social problem solving, skill-building, or therapeutic intervention. Commonly identified protective factors include (National Center for Mental Health Promotion and Youth Violence Prevention, 2004): Individual Positive relationships that promote close bonds, such as the ability to have warm relationships with family members and relationships with teachers and other adults who encourage a young person s competence Positive social orientation, such as the ability to enjoy social interactions, and elicit positive attention from others Healthy beliefs and clear standards, such as no-drug and noalcohol family rules and an expectation that children do well in school Resilient temperament, such as the ability to adjust or recover from misfortune or change Peers with similar positive family backgrounds Peer with positive social orientation Peers Peers with healthy believes and clear standards, such as nodrug and no-alcohol family rules and an expectation that children do well in school Positive bonding among family members Parenting that includes high levels of warmth, avoids severe criticism, and provides a sense of basic trust, and clear and consistent expectations, including parental attention to children s participation in family decisions and responsibilities. Family An emotional supportive parental/ family milieu, including parental attention to children s interests, orderly and structured parent-child relationships, and parental involvement in homework, and school-related activities. High expectations for youth Clear standards and rules for appropriate behavior School Opportunities for youth participating in after-school activities. High expectations for youth Opportunities for the youth participation in community activities. Community norms and laws unfavorable to substance abuse, such as nonsmoking policies in restaurants, strict impaired-driving laws, and liability laws for hosts. Community Decreased accessibility of alcohol, tobacco, other drugs, and firearms, such as enforced of purchasing ages for alcohol and tobacco and increased pricing of alcohol through taxation. 3

Primary Sources Hawkins, J. D., Kosterman, R., Magun, E., Catalano, R. F., & Arthur, M. W. (1997). Substance use and abuse. In R. T. Ammerman & M. Hersen (Eds.), Handbook of prevention and treatment with children and adolescents (pp.203-237). New York: Wiley. National Center for Mental Health Promotion and Youth Violence Prevention. (2004). Risk and Resilience 101. Retrieved June 7, 2005 from http://www.promoteprevent.org National Institute on Drug Abuse. (2003). Preventing drug use among children and adolescents: A research based guide (2 nd ed.; in brief). Retrieved June 7, 2005 from http://www.drugabuse.gov/pdf/prevention/inbrief.pdf NIDA Principles References 1 Aos, S.; Phipps, P.; Barnoski, R.; and Lieb, R. The Comparative Costs and Benefits of Programs to Reduce Crime. Volume 4 (1-05- 1201). Olympia, WA: Washington State Institute for Public Policy, May 2001. 2 Ashery, R.S.; Robertson, E.B.; and Kumpfer K.L., eds. Drug Abuse Prevention Through Family Interventions. 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Journal of the American Medical Association 273:1106 1112, 1995. 7 Chou, C.; Montgomery, S.; Pentz, M.; Rohrbach, L.; Johnson, C.; Flay, B.; and Mackinnon, D. Effects of a community-based prevention program in decreasing drug use in high-risk adolescents. American Journal of Public Health 88:944 948, 1998. 8 Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group. Predictor variables associated with positive Fast Track outcomes at the end of third grade. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology 30(1):37 52, 2002. 9 Dishion, T.; McCord, J.; and Poulin, F. When interventions harm: Peer groups and problem behavior. American Psychologist 54:755 764, 1999. 10 Dishion, T.; Kavanagh, K.; Schneiger, A.K.J.; Nelson, S.; and Kaufman, N. Preventing early adolescent substance use: A family centered strategy for the public middle school. Prevention Science 3(3):191 202, 2002. 11 Gerstein, D.R. and Green, L.W., eds. Preventing Drug Abuse: What Do We Know? 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