Pubdate: Tue, 21 May 2002 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2002 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Tara Parker-Pope Note: Send comments to http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/campaign.htm (ONDCP Media Campaign) WHAT ARE THE BEST WAYS TO KEEP KIDS OFF DRUGS? If $1 billion in television advertising can't keep kids off drugs, then what can? That's the question parents, educators and government officials are asking after a survey revealed last week that the nation's most prominent antidrug campaign has been largely ineffective. Despite five years of huge spending on flashy antidrug ads with numerous celebrities like the Dixie Chicks and Mary J. Blige, teenage drug use remains alarmingly high. Today, 54% of kids have tried an illicit drug before they leave high school, sharply up from a low of 41% in 1992 and about the same as the pot-smoking heyday of 1975. The statistics show just how far off course the nation's antidrug efforts have gone. The grim reality: Most of what parents and educators now say and think about drug prevention is wrong. But it doesn't have to be that way. A growing body of scientific research is beginning to identify several basic principles proven to keep kids off drugs. Most surprising, the best antidrug efforts spend remarkably little time talking about drugs. Instead, they focus on helping kids cope with the demands and stress of daily life. In the LifeSkills Training course, a drug-prevention program used in about 7,500 classrooms nationwide, only about a fourth of the sessions focus directly on drug use. One study found that LifeSkills, a rigorously tested curriculum developed by Cornell University, reduced teen use of cigarettes, alcohol and marijuana by 66%. Here's are some steps that prevention researchers say can keep kids from using drugs. Teach real-world coping skills: Drug prevention can start by building a teen's confidence for a job interview or teaching a child how to rebuff a schoolmate who wants to copy homework. One proven antidrug program even uses deep breathing exercises to help kids cope with the anxiety they feel before a track meet or exam. The problem is that many parents and teachers don't believe such relatively simple measures can really translate into saying no to drugs. But Gilbert J. Botvin, a public-health professor at Cornell University's Weill Medical College and the creator of LifeSkills, says the program works by increasing a child's overall confidence. Doing so decreases "the likelihood they will be negatively influenced by the media or their friends to smoke, drink or use drugs." One caveat: Although the most successful school programs don't harp extensively on the dangers of drug use, that doesn't means parents should avoid the subject at home. On the contrary, parents remain one of the strongest moral influences on kids, and they need to send a clear antidrug message. Studies show that parental ambivalence increases a child's risk for drug use. Focus on one drug at a time: While the broad antidrug campaign hasn't worked, there's strong evidence that media attention to harmful effects of specific drugs has made a difference. For instance, a 1995 ad campaign about abuse of inhalants, such as paint thinners and glues, precipitated a drastic drop in use. In 1986, cocaine use fell after extensive news reports on the death of Len Bias, a college-basketball star who died after using cocaine . Those examples illustrate the so-called life cycle of a drug. Word of a drug's benefits spreads rapidly, but there is always a lag time before kids learn about the dangers. Once the risks become apparent, occasional users drop the drug and potential new users don't try it. Parents and educators can make a difference if they pay attention to the life cycle of a newly popular drug and work to quickly spread the word about harmful effects. Don't lecture: One of the criticisms of the failed ad campaign is that the commercials carried the imprimatur of the government's Office of National Drug Control Policy. "I'm worried putting that tagline causes kids to dismiss the message they've just consumed because they're not sure they like who is giving it to them," says Lloyd Johnston, program director for the University of Michigan's Monitoring the Future study, which tracks drug use trends. The use of lecturing is often cited as the single biggest flaw in perhaps the best-known and most popular antidrug program, D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse Resistance Education), which brings police officers into schools to talk about drugs. Despite its wide use in schools, D.A.R.E has failed to deliver any measurable impact on teen drug use, experts say. But the program is being revamped to encourage more student interaction. The new D.A.R.E., which is being tested on 35,000 students in 200 schools, gets kids more involved in the lesson, such as asking them to discuss how they'd react at a party where kids were drinking. "It has to be highly interactive," says Zili Sloboda, investigator on the D.A.R.E. study and senior research associate at the University of Akron Institute for Health and Social Policy. "Children have to be able to try it on in their own lives." Repeat the message: The most successful antidrug classes are those that are presented over the course of a child's school career. This simple fact may be one reason why most of the nation's antidrug efforts have failed. For instance, D.A.R.E. is taught in 80% of the country's school districts. But most of the time, it's used only in elementary school. Only 25% of the districts teach it in middle school and about 10% offer high-school programs. To find out if your school is teaching a proven antidrug program, check out the U.S. Department of Education Web site, www.ed.gov/offices/OESE/SDFS/. It has a list of "promising and exemplary" antidrug programs in schools around the country. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel