| Literature DB >> 25298961 |
Abstract
At least by informal design, tobacco and other drug abuse prevention programs are tailored to human developmental stage. However, few papers have been written to examine how programming has been formulated as a function of developmental stage throughout the lifespan. In this paper, I briefly define lifespan development, how it pertains to etiology of tobacco and other drug use, and how prevention programming might be constructed by five developmental stages: (a) young child, (b) older child, (c) young teen, (d) older teen, and (e) adult (emerging, young-to-middle and older adult substages). A search of the literature on tobacco and other drug abuse prevention by developmental stage was conducted, and multiple examples of programs are provided for each stage. A total of 34 programs are described as examples of each stage (five-young children, 12-older children, eight-young teens, four-older teens, and five-adults). Implications for future program development research are stated. In particular, I suggest that programming continue to be developed for all stages in the lifespan, as opposed to focusing on a single stage and that developmentally appropriate features continues to be pursued to maximize program impact.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 25298961 PMCID: PMC4186663 DOI: 10.1155/2013/745783
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Addict ISSN: 2314-4734
Tobacco and other drug abuse prevention programming as a function of developmental stage.
| Developmental stage | Age-appropriate substantive contents | Age-appropriate process examples | Example programs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Young children (0–5 years old) | Attachment enhancement, parenting skills, social and self-control skills, emotional learning, decision making, academic preparation, resource acquisition, maybe simple drug consequences facts | Use of toys, nonverbal demonstration, recognition cards, extensive adult involvement, use of timeout | ICPS, NFP, Fast Track, PATHS, HALO |
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| Older children (6–11 years old) | Social and self-control skills, decision making, emotional learning, academic skills and commitment to school, behavioral management, parenting skills, media awareness, drug consequences | More verbal instruction, attribute-based similarity, rule posters and stickers, involvement with more adults outside the home | BrainTrain4Kids, PY/PM, Good Behavior Game, Caring School Community Program, KYB, KACM, CC/FSP, GGC, SSDP, LIFT, BBBSA, Smoke-free Kids |
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| Young teens (12–15 years old) | Drug prevalence overestimates reduction, normative restructuring, media literacy, refusal assertion, decision making, academic remediation, peer and family communication skills, public commitment, drug consequences | Classroom discussion, classroom peer group interaction, class polls, behavioral rehearsal, role play, homework, games, letter writing | LST, All Stars, Project ALERT, Lions Quest,Project TNT, SFP 10–14, Family Matters, CLFC |
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| Older teens (16–17 years old) | Motivation enhancement, stress-coping skills, self-control and communication skills, decision making and goal monitoring, vocational skills, resource acquisition, drug consequences, tobacco cessation | Talk shows, classroom discussion, peer group interaction, class polls, behavioral rehearsal, games, personal journaling, counseling | Project TND, RY, Project SUCCESS, ASPIRE |
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| Adults: emerging adults (18–25 years old) | Motivational interviewing/enhancement, coping strategies, problem solving, communication skills, drug consequences, “settling-down” material | More personalized and private, assessment, personalized feedback, counseling | BASICS, MyStudentBody |
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| Adults: young-to middle age adults (26–50 years old) | Coping skills, decision making, resource acquisition, grief work, motivational interviewing/enhancement, worksite-related issues | Personalized and private assessment and feedback, material covering more health domains (e.g., diet) | Healthy Workplace, CopingMatters |
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| Adults: older adults (51 years old and older) | Life perspectives, motivation enhancement, resource acquisition, coping skills, problem solving, social usefulness pursuits, medical supervision, multiple health domains, safe limits | Personalized feedback, presentations, group discussion, practice in functional capacity maintenance, use of larger fonts | Aging to Perfection |