Author/Authors :
Fabrizio Faggiano، نويسنده , , Maria Rosaria Galanti، نويسنده , , Karl Bohrn، نويسنده , , Gregor Burkhart، نويسنده , , Federica Vigna-Taglianti، نويسنده , , Luca Cuomo، نويسنده , , Leila Fabiani، نويسنده , , Massimiliano Panella، نويسنده , , Tatiana Perez، نويسنده , , Roberta Siliquini، نويسنده , , Peer van der Kreeft، نويسنده , , Maro Vassara، نويسنده , , Gudrun Wiborg and the EU-Dap Study Group، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Objective
To evaluate the effectiveness of the school-based drug abuse prevention program developed in the EU-Dap study (EUropean Drug Abuse Prevention trial) in preventing the use of tobacco, alcohol and drugs at the post-test.
Methods
Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial. Seven European countries participated in the study; 170 schools (7079 pupils 12–14 years of age) were randomly assigned to one of three experimental conditions or to a control condition during the school year 2004/2005. A pre-test survey assessing past and current substance use was conducted before the implementation of the program. The program consisted in 12-hour class-based curriculum based on a comprehensive social-influence approach. A post-test survey was carried out in all participating schools, 3 months after the end of the program. The association between program condition and change in substance use at post-test was expressed as adjusted Prevalence Odds Ratio (POR), estimated by multilevel regression model.
Results
Program effects were found for daily cigarette smoking (POR = 0.70; 0.52–0.94) and episodes of drunkenness in the past 30 days (POR = 0.72; 0.58–0.90 for at least one episode, POR = 0.69; 0.48–0.99 for three or more episodes), while effects on Cannabis use in the past 30 days were of marginal statistical significance (POR = 0.77; 0.60–1.00). The curriculum was successful in preventing baseline non-smokers or sporadic smokers from moving onto daily smoking, but it was not effective in helping baseline daily smokers to reduce or stop smoking.
Conclusion
School curricula based on a comprehensive social-influence model may delay progression to daily smoking and episodes of drunkenness.