Ineffective Prevention Strategies



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Ineffective Prevention Strategies There are two categories of "ineffective" prevention strategies: programs proven to result in no effect or a rletr~mental effect on youth programs that do not use principles and strateg es that have been proven to result in a benejicial effect on youth. In the first case, the program was evaluated for effectiveness and was discovered to actually increase a certain detrimental behavior, such as smoking. In the second case, the program is not grounded in good science. The following prevention programs and activities typic:ally fall into the two categories of ineffectiveness listed above (De Haes, 1987, Drug Strztegies, 1999; Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, How to make prevention morepowerftrl, Anderson, Aromaa, & Rosenbloom, 2007): One-time assemblies or events (e.g., drug-free jance) Personal accounts or testimonies of people in recovery Scare tactics (fear arousal) Curricula that provide only information on AT1311 and their dangers Moral appeals to avoid ATOD based on rightlvcong. Affective curricula that only promote self-estec,m or growth. Programs that aggregate high risk youth in wa1.s.that facilitate or amplify unhealthy attitudes and behaviors. According to the National Institutes of Health (2004). 'Ineffective programs may not harm the participants directly (although some do) but they may 'lave an important toxic effect nonetheless; namely the "opportunity cost" of funds misspent on an unsuitable program that might have been spent on an effective one." Even evidence-based prevention programs that are proven effective may in fact be ineffective if thev are altered in an effort to save time or monev. Examoles of wavs school staff render such programs ineffective include using untrained staff to d2liver lessons, eliminating lessons, or failing to utilize developmentally appropriate strategies. Evidence against effectiveness In the 1970s, "the widespread assumption [was] that all drug education reduces drug use" and "adults could not believe that young people would try drugs if they understood the dangers," (De Haes & Schuurman, 1975). Two prevention researchers questioned that assumption and designed an experiment with four groups of youth to test their hypothesis control group (no intervention) warning (or "mild horror") approach factual (or "increase in knowledge") approach personal (or "problem solvingidiscussion") approach

In the control group, 3.6% of the students tried drugs kletween the baseline assessment and later measures, compared to 7.3% in the warning group, 4.6% in the factual group, and 2.6% in the personal group. The key finding of this research was tllal warning youth about the dangers of drugs or educating youth about the dangers of drul:s made them more likely to try drugs compared to youth who not been exposed to any prevention programming at all. Another example is the hard-hitting fear-arousal ads ol'the National Youth Anti-Drug Media campaign of 2002, which inadvertently left teenage viewers feeling more positive about marijuana and more likely to report that they would use the drug in the future. Although parents may have responded as intended (talking more to their children about drugs and monitoring them more closely), their children were unmoved. There we-e no statistically significant declines in cannabis use and none of the desired changes in beliefi; and attitudes about the drug (Boomerang ads, 2005). Scare tactics When exaggerated dangers, false information, or biased presentations are delivered, teens tend to disbelieve the message and discredit the messenger (B'sck, 1998). Overstated warnings and failure to provide truthful information can backfire when youth have access to contrary information and experience. / - Petrosino, Turpin-Petrosino, and Buehler (2003) founc that well-meaning programs can have harmful effects. Scared Straight and other prison or pi~role programs which bring together inmates and students have resulted in higher rates of re-arrest and delinquent behavior than youths not involved in the intervention (U.S. Surgeon General, 2001). The researchers warn against rationalizations used to justify the absence of outcome evaluations including such assertions as "we know our programs are working," "they can't possibly harm anyone," and "if they only help one kid they're worth it" (Wakefield & Campain, Don't do it!) Motivational or Cautionary Speakers and Assemblies Some adults report that stand alone multi-media presentations, heart wrenching testimonials, or grotesque techniques such as displaying crumpled cars and classroom visits from the grim reaper are "powerful," but experts contend that the effect:; ob!;erved are temporary emotional arousal. These strategies may capture the attention of children ;md youth who view explicit television, movies and computer games, and have become inured to disturbing images or crave increasingly vivid experiences. However, when students are asked what they remember about these programs, they will talk about the destruction, sadness, or horror of the experience, without relating them to their future behavior, reflection, or int~ntion (Wakefield et al.). r Punitive and Zero Tolerance Approaches Programs which remove youth from their peers and grm3up together young people with problem behavior result in increased problem behavior because they act as role models and reinforce each other's undesirable behavior (U.S. Surgeon General, 2001, Dishion, McCord, & Poulin, 1999).

For example, evaluation of boot: camps for delinquent youths (modeled after military basic training) showed significant harmful effects on youths, with significant increase in recidivism. Nonpromotion to succeeding grades is another approach that can have harmful effects. Studies of this approach demonstrate negative effects on student ~chievement, attendance, behavior, and attitudes toward school (US. Surgeon General, 2001). Bibliography Anderson, P., Aromaa, S., & Rosenbloom, D. (2007)..Prevention education in America S schools: Findings and recommendationsj?om a survey of educators. Boston: Join Together. Retrieved September 18,2007, from http://www,iointogether.orglkeyissues/educationid~wnload.html Ashton, Mike. (1 999). The danger of warnings. Drug trndalcoholfindings, l,22-24. Retrieved on March 23, 2007, from www.drugandalcoholfintlings.org.uk Asper, K. (2006). Scared straight? Why to avoid scare tactics. Prevention Forum, Summer 2006, 18-19. Retrieved on January 16,2007, from http://www.prevention.org/forummagazine/archi~~e.asp - Boomerang ads. (2005). Drug and Alcohol Findings, 14, 22-24. Retrieved on May 12,2007, from ~.findings.org.uk/docs/boomerang.pdf Center for Substance Abuse Prevention. (n.d.). How to make prevention more powerful. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Retrieved on April 9, 2007, from www.captus.orglwestem/resourceslpr~vmat~youth.pdf Drug Strategies. (1999). Making the grade: A guide to school drug prevention programs. Washington, DC: Drug Strategies. De Haes, W., & Schuurman, J. (1975). Results of an evaluation study of three drug education methods. International Journal of Health Edz~cation, 28(4), Supplement, 1-16. De Haes, W. (1987). Looking for effective drug educa:ion programmes: Fifteen years' exploration of the effects of different drug educatic~n programmes. Health Education Research, 2(4), 433-438. Dishion, T. J., McCord, J., & Poulin, F. (1999). When interventions harm: Peer groups and problem behavior. American Psychologist, 54(9), i'55-764. National Institutes of Health. (2004, October). NIH State-of-the-Science Conference statement on preventing violence and related health-risking sacial behaviors in adolescents. [NIH Consensus and State-of-the-Science Statements, VJ~. 21, No. 21. Bethesda, MD: National Institutes of Health. Retrieved on May 5,2007, from http://consensus.nih.gov