Pubdate: Mon, 19 Feb 2001
Source: Report Magazine (CN BC)
Section: Guest Column, Pg 56
Copyright: 2001 Report Magazine, United Western Comm Ltd
Contact:  http://www.report.ca
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1327
Author: Tana Dineen
Note: Tina Dineen is a Victoria psychologist and author of "Manufacturing 
Victims: What the Psychology Industry is Doing to People"

WHEN IT COMES TO DRUG-ABUSE PROGRAMS, 'JUST SAY NO' TO TIME-WASTERS LIKE DARE

When an anger management instructor in Hawaii killed one of his students, 
it raised eyebrows.  When a domestic violence counsellor was convicted of 
attempting to kill his wife in Michigan, people were stunned.  And this 
January, when it was revealed that a B.C. drug-prevention officer had died 
of a heroin overdose, the shock rippled far beyond the provincial borders.

As a coordinator of the RCMP's drug-awareness program on Vancouver Island, 
Corporal Barry Schneider had led a crusade against drugs.  His weapon was 
the Drug Resistance Education program (DARE).  His friends and colleagues 
considered him a hero, a "good cop" who had made a tragic mistake, becoming 
a "a victim of the power of seduction of drugs."

When RCMP Staff Sgt. Pete McLaren stated: "I don't think [the death] should 
have an impact on our DARE program in the least," I wasn't convinced. 
Certainly one tragic incident is not sufficient reason to condemn any 
program; however, it does provide an occasion for scrutiny.

The underlying assumption of DARE and similar initiatives is that telling 
children about the dangers of drugs and teaching them the skills to resist 
is like inoculating them to "just say no."  But Corporal Schneider knew all 
about drugs and how to resist them.  If that didn't stop him, is there any 
reason to believe that it can stop anyone else?

Developed by the Los Angeles Police Department in 1983, DARE involves 
uniformed police officers going into elementary schools once a week for 17 
weeks to "educate" students to "resist drug abuse."  The program, described 
as providing the skills to resist tobacco, alcohol and drugs, begins with 
students signing a pledge that they will "keep their body free from drugs." 
At its conclusion, they receive "graduation certificates" and pins.  In 
between pledge and pin they are taught lessons on such topics as "Ways to 
Say No," "Building Self-Esteem" and "Learning Assertiveness."

Since its inception, DARE has spread through the U.S., across Canada and 
into over 50 other countries.  Now offered in over 10,000 cities, it is by 
far the most popular drug-abuse prevention program in the world.  With its 
own trademarked logo, Web site and advertising paraphernalia, including 
baseball caps and bumper stickers, it is also big business.

Despite its claim to "a remarkable record of success," its widespread 
popularity and the massive contributions it receives from government and 
private sources, no evidence exists that DARE keeps kids off drugs. 
Research studies consistently fail to prove its worth.

For instance, a 10-year follow-up study, published in 1999, compared 
graduates of DARE with students who had simply learned about drugs in 
Health class from their teacher.  Those graduates, at age 20, were just as 
likely as the others to be smoking, drinking or using illegal drugs.  The 
senior researcher, Donald Lyman at the University of Kentucky, and his 
colleagues concluded, "There appears to be no reliable short-term, 
long-term, early adolescent, or young adult positive outcomes associated 
with receiving the DARE intervention."

Furthermore, the U.S. surgeon general reported last month that programs 
like DARE do not work.

Proponents seem inclined to brush these findings under the carpet. When 
confronted, the executive director of DARE America Inc., Glenn Levant 
retorted, "Scientists tell you that bumblebees can't fly, but we know 
better."  And in Houston, Texas, where a study showed a shocking 29% 
increase in drug usage and a 34% increase in tobacco usage among students 
participating in DARE, the police chief defended it by saying he would use 
the results to "fine-tune the program to better serve the children."  Both 
he and the city's mayor remained firmly behind it, supporting the annual 
allocation of $3.7 million.

Why do people find it so easy to ignore DARE's failure?

The most likely answer is that in this era of applying touchy-feely 
solutions to our social problems, DARE is another "feel-good" program. The 
way people "feel" about it shields it from rational criticism.

The police instructors feel good; they believe that the work they are doing 
is important.  Parents feel good; they believe that something is being done 
to protect their children from the menace of drug abuse. School officials 
feel good; they are confident that they are providing the best available 
program to address the concerns.  And politicians feel good; they can 
project the image of being caring and benevolent.

Such people take satisfaction in the thought that any boy or girl who does 
not get entangled in drugs has been saved because of the program. They 
remain oblivious to the reality that the vast majority of these children, 
even without it, would not have ended up abusing drugs.  And they fail to 
realize that those at risk are unlikely to have been affected by any 
simplistic, cookie-cutter approach to drug prevention. As one Albertan with 
whom I spoke recently put it: "The kids who were never going to get into 
drugs anyway thought it was good and those who were going to abuse drugs 
just did what they were going to do anyway."

If "feel-good" programs like DARE were stopped, we'd likely see no change 
on the youth drug scene but we would have more time and money to spend on 
our kids: money to buy necessary school supplies, time to teach necessary 
skills, and resources to provide effective services to the kids who don't 
say "no" to drugs.

Cpl. Schneider's death is not a reason to cancel DARE, but the research 
data is.
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MAP posted-by: Beth