| Literature DB >> 28729846 |
Cédric Kempf1, Pierre-Michel Llorca2,3, Frank Pizon4, Georges Brousse2,3, Valentin Flaudias2,3.
Abstract
Rationale: Addiction prevention is a major public health problem, particularly concerning young people. Despite the consensus that primary prevention is essential, the evaluation of its impact is questioned. Objective: The objective of this paper is to assess the latest knowledge of addiction prevention programs for young people. Method: Review a collection of research articles using a keyword-based search on three databases: Pubmed, Eric, and PsycInfo. The research was carried out using three groups of keywords and the eligibility study was completed using two criteria: articles published between 2010 and 2017, and articles in refereed journals.Entities:
Keywords: addiction prevention; child; health promotion; young people
Year: 2017 PMID: 28729846 PMCID: PMC5498551 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Distribution of occurrences of ages in the corpus.
| Age | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 and + |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Occurrences | 5 | 6 | 9 | 9 | 17 | 26 | 27 | 20 | 17 | 13 | 11 | 7 |
Synthesis of prevention programs included in the literature review and their theoretical models.
| Author | Type of population (age) | Total population | Addictive behavior | Name of program | Theoretical models |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10–13 years | 288 | Non-specific | The ecology of human development model | ||
| 7–13 years | 172 | Alcohol and other drugs | Family social learning model | ||
| 11–14 years | 153 | Non-specific | |||
| 12–14 years | 7,079 | Alcohol, tobacco, cannabis | Comprehensive social influence model Social Learning Theory Social Norms Theory Health Belief Theory (see MMH) Theory of Planned Behavior Theory of Problem Behavior | ||
| 11–12 years | 656 | Alcohol | Social Learning Theory | ||
| 11–13 years | 1,874 | Cannabis | Comprehensive social influence model Social Learning Theory: Social Norms Theory Health Belief Theory (see MMH) Theory of Planned Behavior Theory of Problem Behavior | ||
| 9–11 years | 2,512 | Alcohol and tobacco | Health Belief model | ||
| 10–12 years | 8,721 | Non-specific | Theory of Planned Behavior | ||
| 11–12 years | 11,960 | Alcohol, tobacco, cannabis, inhalants, methamphetamine | |||
| 11–15 years | 1,583 | Tobacco | |||
| 11–12 years | 213 | Alcohol | Social Learning Theory | ||
| 10–15 years | 1,693 | Alcohol and tobacco | Theory of behavioral problems | ||
Synthesis of articles related to the study of factors associated with consumption.
| Author | Type of population (age) | Total population | Addictive behavior | Results | Factors associated with consumption (risks or protective) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3–14 years | 6 | Non-specific | The support of parent drug users through social interventions to reduce the risk of consumption in their children. | - (Risk) Low support from adults in educational community - (Protective) Support and communication skills of parent and social workers | |
| 11–19 years | 2,582 | Alcohol | The support of the educational community and the influence of peers are two factors that have a positive effect on the reduction of alcohol consumption in under-16s. | - (Risk) Low support from adults in educational community - (Risk) Weak attachment to school - (Risk) Influence of peers - (Protective) Support and communication skills of parent and social workers | |
| 10–13 years | 688 | Tobacco | Prevention messages in youth campaigns have a probability of reducing testing by 30%. | - (Protective) Prevention campaigns | |
| 10–15 years | 3,903 | Tobacco, alcohol, illegal drugs | Boys face overall higher consumption than girls. The feeling of well-being is a protective factor. The consumption of substances varies with age. | - (Risk) Gender: being a boy | |
| 11–19 years | 7,065 | Alcohol | The 79.1% of parents underestimate their children’s alcohol consumption. Parents are mostly convinced that their children do not have access to drugs. | - (Risk) Underestimation of parents of their child’s consumption | |
| 10–21 years | 3,923 | Tobacco | Low academic achievement, friends’ consumption of tobacco and khat, being a boy, having a sense of high stress and the amount of pocket money are factors associated with the consumption of tobacco and khat. | - (Risk) Low educational outcomes - (Risk) Influence of peers - (Risk) Gender: being a boy - (Protective) Support and communication skills of parent and social workers | |
| 6–17 years | 605 | Cannabis | Situations of abuse in childhood have an effect on the use of cannabis in adolescence. | - (Risk) Situations of aggression - (Risk) Gender: being a boy | |
| ages 10–12 | 1,473 | Alcohol, tobacco, cannabis, inhalants | Linguistic acculturation, particularly through the media, is a factor associated with substance use. Girls are more sensitive to tobacco consumption. Boys are more likely to consume cannabis. Introduction to inhalants is very present in 10 year olds. | - (Risk) Low linguistic acculturation | |
| 8–16 years | 1,147 | Alcohol, tobacco | Situations of chronic stress are predictors for drug use. | - (Risk) Situations of aggression | |
| >11 years | 827 | Heroin, crack, cocaine, cannabis, tobacco, alcohol | The family placement of children is not a risk factor for drug use. The intensity of the child’s relationship with social workers’ referents has a positive effect on drinking. | - (Protective) Support and communication skills of parent and social workers | |
| 11–19 years | 52,214 | Alcohol | A link is shown between the presence of shops selling alcohol and consumption of alcohol by children. | - (Risk) Facility of access to the product | |
| 8–10 years | 396 | Video games | Family relationships, time spent on the computer and educational outcomes are the most important factors regarding an addiction to video games. Boys are more affected than girls. | - (Risk) Low outcomes - (Risk) Gender: being a boy | |
Synthesis of prevalence studies.
| Author | Type of population (age) | Total population | Addictive behavior | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10–17 years | 1,105 | Drugs, tobacco, alcohol, cannabis | The prevalence of alcohol consumption is 45%. The 35% for prescription medication, 28% for tobacco, and 17% for cannabis. | |
| 8–12 years | 1,045 | Internet | The 10.9% of children have an addiction to the Internet. Boys are more affected than girls. Relationship problems and depression are the most present symptoms. | |
| 7–16 years | 42 studies | Internet | The prevalence of an addiction to the Internet may vary between 2.5 and 27%. It is estimated that overall prevalence is 10%. | |
| 7–16 years | 24,013 | Internet | The prevalence of Internet addiction is 6.3%. The 11.5% of elementary school students have an addiction. | |
Summary of articles on recommendations of CDC, validation of scale on smartphone addiction, and model of consumption.
| Author | Type of population (age) | Total population | Addictive behavior | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10–30 years | 55,772 | Tobacco, alcohol, cannabis, cocaine, heroin, inhalants, stimulants, hallucinogens, drugs | Construction of six models of consumption. The earlier the initiation, the earlier the risk of regular consumption. | |
| 6–16 years | 795 | Smartphone | Validation of a scale for the measurement of a Smartphone addiction. Coefficient alpha of Cronbach to 0.88 | |
| 3–18 years | Thirty-nine programs (including seven on addictions) | Alcohol, tobacco, other drugs | Reminder of the seven recommendations established by the CDC on tobacco prevention programs. Addiction prevention programs must register more generally in a school’s health promotion strategy. | |
| Not available | Four Principal programs | Alcohol, tobacco, other drugs | There is not enough scientific research to informed about efficacy of prevention interventions. | |