Pubdate: Sun, 13 May 2007 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Don Harrison, The Province DRUG-USE HARM 'MINIMIZATION' WITH EDUCATION Bad outcomes from drug use among senior high-school students can be significantly reduced by education. That was the major finding of a four-year study by Dalhousie professor Christiane Poulin, one of North America's leading researchers into drug use by secondary school students. Poulin, who also holds a Canada Research Chair in Population Health and Addictions, looked at thousands of Nova Scotia secondary school children during a study that also analyzed 491 documents on the subject. She called the successful education program "harm minimization" and found it significantly decreased the risk and negative consequences of substance use when compared to Nova Scotia senior secondary students not in the program. She said the key was serious, active participation by teachers, principals, school board officials and, of course, students. "Senior high-school students were . . . able to identify ideas about how to protect themselves" from such dangerous activities as drinking and driving and drug overdose or dependency, said Poulin, in Vancouver on Friday for an international substance-abuse conference at Simon Fraser University's Harbour Centre. Poulin also found that harm minimization was not a successful approach when tested on junior high-school students in the same province -- because the younger students "simply weren't there in terms of thinking about harm reduction." As students mature, they are going to increase their risk levels despite adult expectations to the contrary -- and that necessitates harm-minimization policies more sophisticated than "just say no," she said. "There needs to be a plan B." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek