Publication | Closed Access
Three-Year Follow-Up of Drug Abuse Resistance Education (D.A.R.E.)
60
Citations
12
References
1996
Year
Antidrug ContextSubstance UseDrug PolicyEducationCentral D.a.r.eDrug AssessmentDrug TreatmentHarm ReductionPsychologyThree-year Follow-upAddiction MedicinePublic HealthSchool FunctioningHealth EducationHealth SciencesLong-term EffectivenessSchool PsychologyAdolescent PsychologySubstance AbuseAddictionSubstance Addiction
The long-term effectiveness of D.A.R.E. was assessed by contrasting 9th-grade students who received the program in the 6th grade with others who did not receive the program. Of 38 elementary schools eligible for D.A.R.E. programs, 21 received the program and 17 did not. A follow-up survey assessed central D.A.R.E. concepts such as self-esteem, resistance to peer pressure, delay of experimentation with drugs, and drug use. Employing latent variables to represent the concepts, no significant differences were found between D.A.R.E. participants and controls. The authors discuss attenuation of effects and the generally antidrug context of schools.
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