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PRINCIPLES OF PREVENTION AND CURRICULUM DEVELOPEMNT FOR DRUG EDUCATION

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Title: PRINCIPLES OF PREVENTION AND CURRICULUM DEVELOPEMNT FOR DRUG EDUCATION


1
PRINCIPLES OF PREVENTION AND CURRICULUM
DEVELOPEMNT FOR DRUG EDUCATION
  • Dr. Charles Davis
  • Department of Health, Wellness Recreation
  • Fredonia State University

2
WHAT IS PREVENTION?
  • The goal of prevention is to delay, reduce or
    eliminate substance use among children and
    adolescents.
  • Targeting developmentally appropriate risk and
    protective factors.
  • Through key community channels such as the
    family, peer networks, schools, and other
    community and environmental structures.
  • Three types of Prevention Primary, Secondary,
    Tertiary.
  • Public schools roles Primary and Secondary.

3
What do we know about the initiation of substance
use?
  • Most children initiate tobacco, alcohol and
    illicit drug use between the ages of 13 and 16?
  • There is about a 200 increase in the use of
    tobacco, alcohol and other drugs between grades 8
    and 10.
  • Risk to move on to marijuana is 65 times greater
    for persons who smoke or drink
  • Risk to move on to cocaine is 104 times greater
    for persons who used marijuana
  • The more risk factors someone has the greater
    likelihood to use substances.
  • The lack of perceived power and control over
    their lives leads to boredom in and a search for
    freedom from that boredom.
  • In undeveloped countries the main reasons for
    drug use as stated by youth included lack of
    rights, food, health, education and a chance to
    earn a living.

4
MODIFIED SOCIAL STRESS MODEL What are Risk
and Protective factors Associated with drug use?
  • Longitudinal studies that follow children into
    adolescence and early adulthood have
    differentiated the pathways of those who initiate
    and continue to use substances from those who do
    not initiate or who discontinue the use of
    substances.
  • Factors associated with greater potential to use
    substances are called risk factors.
  • Factors associated with reduced potential to use
    substances are called protective factors.

5
RISK FACTORS
  • WHAT ARE THEY?

6
Early Childhood
  • Early Childhood Factors have the longest
    potential impact as they may interfere with
    normal and successful development. These factors
    are Personal and Environmental.
  • Personal risk factors include
  • Being a man vs. being a woman. (Being male is a
    higher risk factor).
  • Being young (many physical and emotional changes
    encourage experimentation).
  • Mental problems.
  • Poor personal skills (decision making, expressing
    self, asserting self, problem solving and coping
    skills.
  • Personality, behavior patterns, belief system
    (locus of control).
  • Interpersonal- include family and peer relations.

7
  • Environmental risk factors include- school, work
    and community.
  • Chaotic home environments parents do not know
    how to look after him/her emotionally,
    physically, or providing support and guidance.
  • Person who does not have a family.
  • Person who is being abused.
  • Parents, brothers or sisters who use drugs
    (availability).
  • Ineffective parenting.
  • Lack of mutual attachments and nurturing.
  • A great deal of unstructured time with limited or
    no constructive, imaginative and challenging
    activities to take part in.
  • No job opportunities.
  • The societys values encourage substance abuse.
  • i.e. Widespread availability limited
    or no enforcement of laws
  • resulting in perceptions of
    approval of drug-using behaviors.

8
ENVIRONMENTAL RISK FACTORS SPECIFIC TO THE
SCHOOL ENVIRONMENT
  • Include
  • Limited opportunities for education.
  • Inappropriate shy and aggressive behavior in the
    classroom.
  • Failure in school performance and school bonding.
  • Affiliation with deviant peers. (Peer groups
    teach acceptance of certain behaviors).
  • Establishing identity, and achieving within this
    environment.

9
PROTECTIVE FACTORS
  • WHAT ARE THEY?

10
Personal
  • Strong bonds family, friends, pets that
    encourage caring, sharing).
  • Well-developed personal skills ( analyzing
    situations, making quick decisions, communicate
    with others, relax, negotiate, compromise).
  • Parental monitoringclear rules of conduct and
    involvement of parents in lives of children.

11
Environmental
  • Success in school performance
  • Strong bonds with prosocial institutions that
    meet physical and emotional needs ( social
    centers, intramurals, sports, employment)
  • Adoption of conventional norms about substance
    use ( tradition of temperance, moderation,
    abstinence)
  • Laws that regulate substance abuse are stringent
    and well enforced and access to drugs is limited
    or difficult

12
Other Factors Influencing Drug Use
  • Availability of alcohol, tobacco and drugs
  • Trafficking patterns
  • Beliefs that drug use is generally tolerated

13
Progress in Prevention Science Influences on the
development of effective prevention programs
  • Epidemiology of substance use
  • _ Establishment of Drug Schedules- 1972
  • Establishment of the National Institute on Drug
    Abuse-1974
  • National Household Survey on Drug Abuse 1975
  • Monitoring the Future Study 1975
  • Longitudinal Studies on Factors Associated with
    Initiation of Drug Use 1975
  • Behavior Theory
  • First Effective Smoking Prevention Program Late
    1970s

14
Progress in Prevention Science
  • National Institute on Drug Abuse funds 85 of
    prevention research in country.
  • Reports of effective prevention programming in
    late 1980s
  • - Values, resistance, self esteem models.
  • First National Conference on Drug Abuse
    Prevention Research Putting Research to Work for
    the Community September 1996.

15
Prevention Program Approaches
  • UNIVERSAL programs reach the general population.
  • SELECTIVE programs target groups at risk or
    subsets of the general population (e.g., children
    of drug users or poor school achievers).
  • INDICATED programs are designed for groups who
    are already using substances or who exhibit other
    risk-related behaviors.

16
How to Use Risk and Protective Factors to Develop
Prevention Programswhen you go into a community
and establish a drug prevention program, keep
these risk and protective factors in mind while
deciding what action to take.
  • Family Relationships Teach parents skills for
    better family communications, discipline, firm
    and consistent rule making, get to know friends,
    understand problems and concerns.
  • Peer Relationships Develop social competency
    skills for improved communications, enhancement
    of positive peer relationships and social
    behaviors and resistance skills to refuse
    substances.
  • School Environment Enhance academic performance
    and strengthen school bonding foster a
    substance-free environment with support for those
    who initiate use.
  • The Community Environment Enhance anti-substance
    use norms and pro-social behavior through policy
    or regulations, mass media efforts,
    community-wide awareness programs new laws and
    enforcement, advertising restrictions drug free
    school zones. Involve the whole community if
    possible.
  • Negative effects of substances on children and
    adolescents health and activities.
  • Establish a broad based program looking at many
    drug, not just one.
  • Encourage positive alternatives.
  • Involve the media to reinforce positive values
    (learning, exposure, potential traps).

17
PRINCIPLES OF PREVENTION
  • STRUCTURE
  • CONTENT
  • DELIVERY

18
Structure
  • Be long-term and extend over the school career
    with repeated booster interventions.
  • Focus on the family this creates a greater
    impact than focusing exclusively on parents or
    children.
  • Accompany community programs that include media
    campaigns and policy changes with school and/or
    family interventions.
  • Strengthen anti-drug norms in all prevention
    settings.

19
Content
  • Enhance protective factors reduce or reverse
    risk factors
  • Target all forms of drug use tobacco, alcohol,
    marijuana, inhalants and other drugs.
  • Teach skills to refuse drugs when offered,
    strengthen personal commitments against use and
    increase social competency, reinforce anti-drug
    use attitudes.
  • Include a parents or caregivers component to
    reinforce what child is learning and opens
    discussion.

20
Delivery
  • Incorporate interactive methods for adolescents
  • Utilize opportunities that schools offer to reach
    diverse populations
  • Adapt prevention programming to address the
    specific nature of problem in the local community
  • Address the level of risk of the target
    population populations at higher risk require
    earlier and more intensive prevention efforts
  • Be age-specific, developmentally appropriate and
    culturally sensitive. Encourage social
    interaction.
  • Create healthy alternatives- leisure, supportive
    attitudes.

21
Steps for Effective Implementation
  • Problem Identification
  • Needs Assessments
  • Linking Prevention Strategies to Need
  • Program Implementation
  • Program Evaluation

22
Dimensions Of Prevention Need
  • Prevalence--who is using what drugs.
  • Incidence--who begins the use of what drugs.
  • Service need--what types of prevention services
    are needed.
  • Quality of services delivered--are services
    appropriate and adequate?

23
Prevention Principles for School-Based Programs
  • Do the programs reach children from elementary
    through high school? If not, do they at least
    reach children during the critical middle or
    junior high school years?
  • Do the programs contain multiple years of
    intervention?
  • Do the programs use a well-tested, standardized
    intervention with detailed lesson plans and
    student materials?
  • Do the programs teach drug-resistance skills
    through interactive methods with reinforcement
    and extended practice?
  • Do the programs foster pro-social bonding to
    the school?
  • To the community?

24
School-Based Programs Cont.
  • Do the programs
  • teach social competence and drug resistance
    skills
  • promote positive peer influence
  • promote anti-drug social norms
  • emphasize skills-training teaching methods
  • Include an adequate dosage (10-15 sessions in
    year 1 with 10 or more boosters in subsequent
    years)
  • To maximize benefits, do the programs retain core
    elements of effective intervention design?
  • Is there periodic evaluation to determine whether
    the programs are effective?
  • Are they implemented with fidelity?

25
Prevention Principles for Family-Based Programs
  • Do the family-based programs reach families of
    children at each stage of development?
  • Do the programs train parents in behavioral
    skills to
  • reduce conduct problems in children
  • improve parent-child relations, including
    positive reinforcement, listening and
    communications skills, and problem-solving
  • provide consistent discipline and rulemaking
  • monitor childrens activities during adolescence
  • Do the programs include an educational component
    for parents with drug information for them and
    their children?
  • Are the programs directed to families whose
    children are in elementary through high
    school to enhance protective factors?
  • Do the programs provide access to counseling
    services for families at risk?

26
Prevention Principles for
Community Programs
  • To be comprehensive, does the program have
    components for the individual, the family, the
    school, the media, community organizations and,
    health providers? Are they well integrated in
    theme and content?
  • Does the prevention program use media and
    community education strategies to increase public
    awareness, attract community support, reinforce
    the school-based curriculum for students and
    parents, and keep the public informed of the
    programs progress?
  • Can program components be coordinated with other
    community efforts to reinforce prevention
    messages?
  • Are interventions carefully designed to reach
    different populations at risk and are they of
    sufficient duration to make a difference?
  • Does the program follow a structured
    organizational plan that progresses
    from needs assessment through
    planning, implementation, and review to
    refinement with feedback?
  • Are the objectives and activities specific,
    time limited, feasible, and integrated so
    that they work together across program components
    and can be evaluated?

27
Evaluation Process
  • What was done in the program?
  • How was the program carried out?
  • Who participated in it?
  • Was the program implemented as intended?
  • Did the program achieve what was expected?
  • Did the program produce the desired long-term
    effects?

28
Marketing Prevention
  • Remember ..
  • No particular approach or strategy has been
    proven through rigorous scientific study to be
    consistently effective over the long term in
    reducing drug abuse. However, there is some
    consensus among experts, practitioners and youth
    themselves on what kinds of elements need to be
    taken into consideration when designing a
    prevention program.
  • Not all young people are the same and they are
    not all equally vulnerable. Strategies should be
    carefully tailored to clearly defined target
    groups.
  • Ideally programs should combine
    knowledge/attitude/behavior with health
    promotion, and the building of self-esteem and
    resistance skills.
  • The strategies should encourage individual
    strengths and those things that protect
    individuals in stressful situations and
    environments, and should give youth a set of
    specific skills for resisting peer pressure to
    use drugs, for example in communications and
    relationships with peers. Opportunities to meet
    together, play, and take part in activities that
    develop self-confidence.
  • Scare tactics reduce the trust that youth may
    have in the advice of adults, and in some cases
    actually encourage drug use.
  • For every 1 spent on prevention, saves 4 to 5
    in drug abuse treatment and counseling
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