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Rehab News: Review of underage drinking prevention programmes published
Last year the US surgeon general issued a "Call to Action to Prevent and Reduce Underage Drinking". Now, a new report by an Iowa State University researcher assesses the effectiveness of underage drinking prevention programmes and provides a better idea of how to achieve key goals outlined by the surgeon general.
Lead author Richard Spoth, director of the Partnerships in Prevention Science Institute (PPSI) at Iowa State, along with co-authors Mark Greenberg and Robert Turrisi of Penn State, published "Preventive Interventions Addressing Underage Drinking: State of the Evidence and Steps Toward Public Health Impact" in the May issue of Pediatrics – the official journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
"The Pediatrics supplement underscores the scope of the underage drinking problem, reporting that over 4 million youths aged 12-17 drink monthly, and more than half of them have a drinking pattern that puts them at high risk for negative health and social consequences," Spoth said.
Out of the 400 interventions that the researchers identified and screened, 12 were defined as "most promising" because they met these six criteria:
"Essentially, interventions meeting criteria were those that had been tested through rigorous, well-designed studies consistent with accepted standards for intervention research, had demonstrated practically significant results, and had detailed summaries of intervention procedures," said Spoth.
Among the interventions that were listed as "Most Promising" for youths 10 to 15 years of age, were three from the Midwest -- the Midwestern Prevention Project/Project STAR, which involved 42 public middle and junior high schools and 3,412 students from Kansas City and Indianapolis; Project Northland, which involved 24 school districts in north-eastern Minnesota; and ISU Extension's Strengthening Families Program: For Parents and Youth 10-14, which involved 36 public schools and 1,650 students in rural Iowa.
In addition to the "most promising" intervention programmes, Spoth and his research colleagues also identified 29 that met criteria for "mixed or emerging" evidence.
"This review indicated that a number of preventive interventions significantly reduced the rate of alcohol use in studied underage populations, as well as bolstered protective factors among children that reduce risks for alcohol use," the authors wrote. "The review also underscores a number of advances in preventive interventions to address underage drinking over the past 15 years."
In their report, Spoth and his research colleagues recommend improved coverage of intervention research, such as studies concerning tweens, young adults not attending college, and non-majority populations. They urge conducting more research that would help in the understanding of what the "active ingredients" are in each individual programme, or why they're successful, in order to improve their design and effectiveness.
"The conclusion asks the question 'Where do we need more research?' 'What do we need to better understand this public health impact?,'" said Spoth, who also received the 2008 Prevention Science Award from the Society for Prevention Research for outstanding contributions to advancing the field of prevention science two weeks ago at the organizations' national meeting in San Francisco.
"For example, we need to understand more about university-community partnerships (like PPSI)," he said. "And we need to better understand factors that influence the effective distribution, dissemination or diffusion of these programmes. It's understanding what you need to do to design it so that it's not only effective, but it reaches the prospective consumers that could benefit from it."
Spoth et al. ‘Preventive Interventions Addressing Underage Drinking: State of the Evidence and Steps Toward Public Health Impact', Pediatrics, 2008; 121. The article can be found online at: http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/121/Supplement_4/S311.
Article published on 25/06/2008 by DryOutNow.com
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