Pubdate: Thu, 10 Jun 2004 Source: Charlotte Sun Herald (FL) Copyright: 2004 Sun Coast Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.sun-herald.com/newsch.htm Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1708 Author: Elaine Allen-Emrich Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) TRYING TO STOP KIDS FROM SMOKING Prevention Group Discusses Child Behavior NORTH PORT -- Some sixth-graders thought they would be sent to military school if they were caught smoking. Others said they might die if they smoked marijuana or drank alcohol. Dee Dunlap, Safe Schools liaison, told members of the Community-Based Prevention Marketing Community Advisory Committee, Tuesday, that she learned of many different perceptions from sixth-graders while surveying them on dangerous behaviors. Dunlap worked in schools in the Sarasota County School District, learning what sixth-graders thought about using tobacco and alcohol. "Some said that they thought they could die if they drank," Dunlap said. "The concern is if they try drinking and find out they don't die, by the time they are in eighth grade, they continue to experiment with alcohol or tobacco. That sometimes leads to other drug usage." The CBPMCAC has been working for several years to develop marketing strategies to prevent students from using alcohol and tobacco. One of the marketing items used to encourage preteens against dangerous behaviors was the development of a youth theater group. Through 16 performances, students traveled to middle schools in Sarasota promoting healthy behaviors. The play aimed to help students recognize and deal with peer pressure as they witness the potential consequences of unhealthy life decisions. In order to continue efforts, CBPMCAC created recommendations they could provide to communities and schools in order to help prevent underage drinking and tobacco usage. Members wrote a variety of wish-list items and ideas they would suggest be used, regardless of the cost. Members recently gathered to determine realistic recommendations, considering the actual funds allocated. Some of the recommendations could also be funded through federal and local grants. Some of the ideas to help prevent underage drinking include: training bartenders and retail sales personnel to identify minors and refuse service, encouraging parents to limit the amount of alcohol kept in the home or store liquor in places children cannot access, and developing a policy to register keg sales so that people who purchase kegs for minors can be identified. Other ideas were to require coaches to enforce athletic codes prohibiting underage drinking, encourage parents to hug and talk with their children when they return home from evenings with friends, teach students how to refuse alcohol from friends, older siblings and peers and emphasize the opportunities youths have to be leaders by refusing to follow the crowd. Lastly, the group suggested teaching youth social and stress management skills during the early grades and continuing throughout high school to establish a lifelong ability to cope with emotional and other life problems. Under the tobacco recommendations, members suggested that teachers emphasize in a positive manner that most high school students don't smoke, a Students Working Against Tobacco club be established in every middle and high school in Sarasota County, physicians be provided with materials to deliver anti-smoking messages during mandated school physicals, hot line and local phone numbers for reporting sales to minors be advertised, local grocery store and restaurant owners be encouraged to ID youth when purchasing tobacco products, local school boards and state Department of Education be encouraged to legislate kindergarten through sixth grade health education, sequential health education that includes tobacco education, skills building, and health decision making, a community service program be designed that exposes youth to the consequences of smoking and tobacco addiction, and youth activities be designed and implemented that focus on the development of leisure/hobbies. Board members plan to review tobacco policies involving youth in other states. Once members select four or five recommendations from the two categories, they will work on administering them in schools and in the community. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin