| Literature DB >> 26458757 |
Fariel Ishaak1, Nanne Karel de Vries2, Kees van der Wolf3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to design the content and accompanying materials for a school-based program--Study without Drugs--for adolescents in junior secondary schools in Suriname based on the starting points and tasks of the fourth step of the Intervention Mapping protocol (which consists of six steps). A program based on this protocol should include a combination of theory, empirical evidence, and qualitative and quantitative research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26458757 PMCID: PMC4603754 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-2374-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Key findings of the 2004, 2005, and 2006 DRPP reports on junior secondary school students’ drug use [6–8]
| Drugs used by survey respondents | 2004 school survey (nationwide, anonymous questionnaire) | 2005 study (single-site, in-person interview) | 2006 school survey (nationwide, anonymous questionnaire |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alcohol | 74.3 % | 25 % | 63.5 % |
| Tobacco | 35.4 % | 29.6 % | 35.8 % |
| Marijuana | 43 % | 25 % | 68 % |
DRPP drug demand reduction program
Prevalence of alcohol use
| Country | Lifetime prevalence | Past-year prevalence | Past-month prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antigua and Barbuda | 71.10 | 49.20 | 31.32 |
| Barbados | 75.60 | 54.73 | 34.57 |
| Dominica | 80.18 | 66.05 | 51.58 |
| Grenada | 80.77 | 58.94 | 39.55 |
| Guyana | 61.02 | 46.40 | 36.79 |
| Haiti | 47.72 | 26.91 | 18.27 |
| Jamaica | 65.83 | 47.03 | 33.38 |
| St Kitts and Nevis | 64.77 | 45.41 | 30.04 |
| St Lucia | 86.20 | 73.64 | 61.95 |
| St Vincent and the Grenadines | 65.34 | 46.38 | 33.21 |
| Suriname | 61.15 | 44.78 | 31.80 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 82.08 | 66.60 | 48.23 |
| Average | 68.90 | 51.00 | 36.70 |
Prevalence of tobacco use
| Country | Lifetime prevalence | Past-year prevalence | Past-month prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antigua and Barbuda | 17.31 | 4.47 | 1.79 |
| Barbados | 21.46 | 8.25 | 3.66 |
| Dominica | 30.69 | 13.22 | 7.76 |
| Grenada | 34.53 | 10.75 | 5.45 |
| Guyana | 17.66 | 6.10 | 4.13 |
| Haiti | 9.20 | 3.25 | 1.49 |
| Jamaica | 24.61 | 8.37 | 4.44 |
| St Kitts and Nevis | 11.82 | 4.00 | 1.98 |
| St Lucia | 27.84 | 11.31 | 5.97 |
| St Vincent and the Grenadines | 21.01 | 5.43 | 2.66 |
| Suriname | 33.06 | 14.15 | 7.15 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 28.86 | 11.36 | 5.61 |
| Average | 25.60 | 9.45 | 4.94 |
Prevalence of marijuana use
| Country | Lifetime prevalence | Past-year prevalence | Past-month prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antigua and Barbuda | 23.94 | 12.88 | 8.05 |
| Barbados | 18.97 | 11.42 | 6.88 |
| Dominica | 29.54 | 17.47 | 11.62 |
| Grenada | 25.43 | 14.44 | 7.75 |
| Guyana | 12.12 | 6.87 | 3.97 |
| Haiti | 2.20 | 1.05 | 0.63 |
| Jamaica | 21.56 | 12.04 | 7.06 |
| St Kitts and Nevis | 24.14 | 12.85 | 6.94 |
| St Lucia | 26.51 | 16.49 | 9.46 |
| St Vincent and the Grenadines | 20.13 | 12.92 | 5.82 |
| Suriname | 5.53 | 3.29 | 2.02 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 12.09 | 6.44 | 2.70 |
| Average | 17.03 | 9.76 | 5.39 |
Fig. 1Intervention mapping (Bartholomew, Parcel, Kok & Gottlieb, 2011)
Demographics of survey I respondents for the IM-based drug-prevention program
| Category | Teachers | Students |
|---|---|---|
| Response rate | 95.3 % (225/236) | 694 (100 %) |
| Average age | 39 years | 15 years (range, 13–16) |
| Gender | 80 % female, 20 % male | 66 % female, 34 % male |
| Educational experience | 71.2 % working in junior secondary schools in general education; 23.3 % in junior vocational education; 5.5 % in junior technical education | 70.2 % in junior secondary schools; 25.4 % in junior vocational education; 4.3 % in junior technical education |
| 53 % with >10 years’ experience in education | -- |
Overview of the program plan
| Order | Activity | Aim | Means, materials |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Conduct pretest on drugs | Measure student knowledge and attitudes about drugs | Questionnaire |
| Duration: 30 min | |||
| 2 | Interpersonal information activities | Ask for student’s attention during drug-prevention program and offer information about the program. | Folder, PowerPoint presentation of sample images of drugs |
| Duration: 2 h (activities performed outside class) | |||
| 3 | Subject: biology | - Categorize discussed drinks | Lesson plan, drug handbook, photos |
| Consequences of alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, and cocaine use | - State consequences and hold discussion | ||
| Duration: 40 min | |||
| 4 | Subject: physical education | - Educational conversation about ethics, including discussion of four consequences of drug use in sports | Lesson plan, photos (for example, steroid use) |
| Sports and drugs (steroids) | |||
| Duration: 40 min | |||
| - Measures to protect against drug use | |||
| 5 | Subject: Dutch | - Put events in the correct order and discuss them | Lesson plan, photos, DVD of film ( |
| Discussion about the consequences of drug trafficking and swallowing cocaine pellets | |||
| - Indicate consequences of swallowing pellets | |||
| Duration: 80 min | |||
| 6 | Subject: social studies | - Put events in the correct order | Lesson plan, photos, DVD of play ( |
| Broadcast of play with anti-drug message | - Arrive at clear understanding of drug use among young people | ||
| Duration: 60 min | - Indicate causes and consequences that lead to drug use among students | ||
| - Consider protective measures | |||
| 7 | Subject: Dutch | - Write and present a slogan | Lesson plan, drug handbook, photos, blackboard, chalk |
| Write an anti-drug slogan | |||
| Duration: 40 min | |||
| 8 | Subject: art | - Design a poster | Lesson plan, folders, poster, drawing materials, drug handbook, chalk |
| Posters with anti-drug message | |||
| Duration: 40 min | |||
| 9 | Subject: Dutch | - Initiate conversation through a game on drugs | Lesson plan, game materials |
| Game about drugs | |||
| Duration: 40 min | - Create a loving relationship in a game | ||
| 10 | Post-test | Measure student knowledge, skills, and attitudes at end of program | Test |
| Duration: 30 min (activities performed outside class) |
Fig. 2Overview of steps required to develop the studied drug-prevention program’s lesson plans
Student statements during the group interview
| Positive remarks | Points to improve |
|---|---|
| ● “I’m learning a lot.” | ● “The pretest picture is rather small.” |
| ● “Attractive folder and poster” | ● “The poster is attractive, but it could be larger?” (2) |
| ● “The film and DVD are OK.” | ● “I don’t understand everything in the folder.” (3) |
| ● “The booklet really has nice info.” | ● “Can’t the film be in English?” (2) |
| ● “I will always use this book during lessons.” | ● Why is it a Spanish film? I can’t follow it.” (1) |
| ● “The letter is good for my parents.” | ● “I can't read the translation. It’s too fast.” (1) |
| ● “Much varied material” | ● “The Spanish film is difficult to understand, even with English subtitles.” (2) |
| ● “Will this class also participate in the program? I really want to do it.” | |
| ● “Such a funny DVD and you learn something from it. The film is also nice.” |