Pubdate: Wed, 20 Dec 2000 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 2000 Associated Press Author: Bernard McGhee, Associated Press Writer Note: Our newshawk writes: This article, although not about illegal drugs, is of the essence when considered in relation to D.A.R.E. and other establishment programs. Showcase Anti-Smoking Project Fails SEATTLE (AP) - School officials are taking another look at how to dissuade children from smoking after a 15-year, $15 million showcase study was declared a failure. The Warden School District, one of 40 districts in the state that participated in the program, will keep trying to discourage youthful smoking, but hasn't decided how, Superintendent Dennis Brandon said. "The ... study isn't going to give us a clear direction how to do that," Superintendent Dennis Brandon said. More than a quarter of the former schoolchildren in the study are now regular smokers, about the same number as those who didn't receive the classes, according to a report in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. The study involved 8,388 schoolchildren and 640 teachers and was based on what is called a "social influences" approach. The experiment included classes designed to help children ignore social pressures to smoke, teach them about the dangers of smoking and provide motivation to remain smoke-free for life. The students were taught to resist advertising, peer pressure and poor influences at home. Children were targeted at the ages when smoking is commonly adopted as a habit. A curriculum for grades 3 through 10 was drawn up by smoking-prevention experts at the National Cancer Institute, which funded the research. The program met guidelines for anti-tobacco education recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The "social-influences" approach has been favored by smoking prevention researchers for 25 years, said Arthur V. Peterson Jr., the lead researcher. But Tuesday, researchers announced that surveys of the students showed that 24.4 percent of the girls and 26.3 percent of the boys were daily smokers by the 12th grade. That nearly mirrors the smoking habits of students who did not participate in the study. Two years after high school, smoking rates were even higher: 28.42 percent for those who took part in the program, 29.07 percent of those who had not. "It was a disappointing and surprising result to us because the social influences approach was so attractive," said Peterson, who heads a cancer prevention program at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, which performed the study. "I just think it's back to the drawing board and we need to look at everything," he said. He said tactics that have worked in some areas include denying children access to tobacco by raising taxes and controlling sales, and by countering tobacco company advertising with youth-oriented media blitzes. Paula Murray, whose daughter took part in the program in the Naches Valley School District, expressed some reservations about the study. "I don't think there was as big a push as they got older," said Murray, whose daughter does not smoke. "They need to really push it from the third grade to the seventh grade because after the seventh grade it's too late." Smoking is responsible for about 400,000 premature deaths annually in the United States, the Centers for Disease Control says. It's estimated that tobacco costs the nation about $50 billion a year in health care costs. Cigarette smoking has been linked to eight types of cancer and to heart and lung diseases. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake