Publication | Closed Access
Preventing adolescent drug abuse through a multimodal cognitive-behavioral approach: Results of a 3-year study.
487
Citations
41
References
1990
Year
Substance UseAdolescent Behavioral HealthHealth PreventionSubstance Use DisordersPsychologyAdolescent Drug AbuseAddiction MedicinePublic Health3-Year StudyHealth EducationNew York StateBehavioral SciencesPsychiatrySchool PsychologyPrevention SystemAddiction TreatmentHealth PromotionSubstance AbusePrevention ProgramAdolescent CognitionMultimodal Cognitive-behavioral ApproachAddictionPrevention ScienceSubstance AddictionMedicinePsychopathologyCommunication Skills
Students (N = 4,466) attending 56 schools in New York State were involved in a 3-year study testing the effectiveness of a cognitive-behavioral approach to substance abuse prevention. In a randomized block design, schools were assigned to receive (a) the prevention program with formal provider training and implementation feedback, (b) the prevention program with videotaped provider training and no feedback, or (c) no treatment. After pretest equivalence and comparability of conditions with respect to attrition were established, students who received at least 60% of the prevention program (N = 3,684) were included in analyses of program effectiveness. Significant prevention effects were found for cigarette smoking, marijuana use, and immoderate alcohol use. Prevention effects were also found for normative expectations and knowledge concerning substance use, interpersonal skills, and communication skills.
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