Literature DB >> 11768193

Effective prevention programs for tobacco use.

M A Pentz1.   

Abstract

Several types of prevention programs have shown effects on delaying or reducing youth tobacco use for periods of 1-5 years or more. These are referred to as evidence-based programs. However, they are not widely used. At the same time, with few exceptions, adolescent tobacco use rates have been stable or have increased in the 1990s. The challenge for prevention is to identify critical components shared by effective prevention programs--that is, components most associated with effect, and then to evaluate factors that are most likely to promote adoption, implementation, and diffusion of effective programs across schools and communities in the United States. Effective tobacco prevention programs focus on counteracting social influences on tobacco use, include either direct training of youth in resistance and assertiveness skills or, for policy and community organization interventions, direct or indirect (through adults) training in community activism, and are mainly theory-based, with an emphasis on three levels of theory: (a) personal (attitudes, normative expectations, and beliefs); (b) social (social or group behavior); and/or (c) environmental (communications and diffusion). Program effects increase with the use of booster sessions, standardized implementor training and support, multiple program components, and multiple levels of theory. Overall, multi-component community programs that have a school program as a basis, with supportive parent, media, and community organization components, have shown the most sustained effects on tobacco use. Positive program adoption by the school or community, extent and quality of program implementation, and existence of credible networks of leaders to promote the program are critical for any effect. Research on predictors of adoption, implementation, and diffusion of evidence-based programs is scanty relative to outcome research. In addition, more research is needed on why multi-component programs appear to be most effective, whether effect is related to existing tobacco policies, whether prevention programs have differential effects on youth with different natural trajectories of tobacco use, and whether prevention programs can be used to recruit smokers into cessation programs.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 11768193     DOI: 10.1080/14622299050011891

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nicotine Tob Res        ISSN: 1462-2203            Impact factor:   4.244


  7 in total

1.  Project FLAVOR: 1-Year Outcomes of a Multicultural, School-Based Smoking Prevention Curriculum for Adolescents.

Authors:  Jennifer B Unger; Chih-Ping Chou; Paula H Palmer; Anamara Ritt-Olson; Peggy Gallaher; Steven Cen; Kara Lichtman; Stanley Azen; C Anderson Johnson
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Trajectories of peer social influences as long-term predictors of drug use from early through late adolescence.

Authors:  Lei Duan; Chih-Ping Chou; Valentina A Andreeva; Mary Ann Pentz
Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2008-07-15

3.  Cross-gender social normative effects for violence in middle school: do girls carry a social multiplier effect for at-risk boys?

Authors:  Lisa M Yarnell; Keryn E Pasch; H Shelton Brown; Cheryl L Perry; Kelli A Komro
Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2014-02-25

4.  Psychosocial mediators of a school-based tobacco prevention program in India: results from the first year of project MYTRI.

Authors:  Sheri Lewis Bate; Melissa H Stigler; Marilyn S Thompson; Monika Arora; Cheryl L Perry; K Srinath Reddy; David P Mackinnon
Journal:  Prev Sci       Date:  2009-06

5.  School-based smoking prevention programs with the promise of long-term effects.

Authors:  Brian R Flay
Journal:  Tob Induc Dis       Date:  2009-03-26       Impact factor: 2.600

6.  The promise of long-term effectiveness of school-based smoking prevention programs: a critical review of reviews.

Authors:  Brian R Flay
Journal:  Tob Induc Dis       Date:  2009-03-26       Impact factor: 2.600

7.  Does adding a psychosocial cessation intervention to an existing life-skills and tobacco-prevention program influence the use of tobacco and supari among secondary school students?: Findings from a quasi-experimental trial in Mumbai, India.

Authors:  Nilesh Chatterjee; Himanshu Gupte; Gauri Mandal; Tshering Bhutia
Journal:  Tob Prev Cessat       Date:  2019-11-26
  7 in total

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