Pubdate: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Peter McKnight Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) THE PROBLEM WITH 'DARE' IS THAT IT DOESN'T WORK The Popular, Widespread, School Anti-Drug Program Is Still Promoted Despite Scientific Evidence It's A Failure In November 2000, a 43-year-old man on Vancouver Island died from an overdose of heroin. Certainly not unusual, especially in British Columbia, you might say. But two things made this case unique: One, the man, Barry Schneider, was a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer. And two, he was a top official with DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education), the popular, RCMP-run, school-based drug prevention program. Schneider's death was certainly an irony, and a tragedy. But there is a continuing tragedy here, and it's that DARE continues to live. After all, scientific evidence overwhelmingly confirms that DARE is useless -- or worse than useless. Yet while certain interests, including the RCMP, continue to attack harm reduction measures like Vancouver's supervised injection facility despite its scientifically proven benefits, DARE continues to fly below the radar, gradually insinuating itself into more and more school districts despite its lack of effectiveness. Developed by former Los Angeles police chief Daryl Gates and the Los Angeles Unified School District in 1983, DARE sends specially trained police officers into schools to inform kids about the dangers of drugs and to help them develop self-esteem and the confidence to resist peer pressure to use drugs. The program quickly became a hit after its inception and now is by far the world's most popular drug prevention program, taught in at least 54 countries worldwide and reaching more than 35 million students each year. As a testament to its popularity, the British Columbia RCMP says on its website that DARE "is one of the most requested programs and appears to be very successful." But appearances can be deceiving, and none more so than the appearance of DARE. According to the scientific evidence, countries receive nothing of value -- and kids learn nothing of value -- for the millions of dollars they've spent on the program. To date, more than 30 studies of DARE have been conducted, and virtually all have found the program has no effect on drug use. (The few studies that have found an effect, including one by the Illinois Police Department, discovered that kids who participated in the program were actually more likely to use drugs than those with no exposure to DARE.) This is not news. Within 10 years of DARE's inception, scientific studies attested to its ineffectiveness, yet the program still spread across the United States like a virus. In a study published in the American Journal of Public Health in 1994 - -- against the wishes of DARE officials, who tried to prevent the study's publication -- scientists with the Research Triangle Institute in North Carolina looked at 18 early studies and performed a "meta-analysis" on the eight most rigorous reports, including one from the B.C. solicitor-general. They discovered that DARE had no statistically significant effect on drug use or self-esteem, precisely the two factors the program was intended to affect. Children who had participated in DARE did have greater knowledge of drugs, but that means only that it helped make them informed consumers if they chose to use alcohol or illicit substances. In light of this, the authors concluded that "DARE could be taking the place of other, more beneficial drug use curricula that adolescents could be receiving." One weakness of this meta-analysis was that since it examined studies completed during the early days of DARE, it looked only at the attitudes and behaviours of kids shortly after they completed the program rather than assessing its long-term effects. The authors therefore called for longitudinal studies, and some years later, their calls were answered. A widely reported 1998 study led by criminologist Dennis Rosenbaum tracked more than 1,000 DARE students for six years and found the program had no significant impact on drug use. Even worse, Rosenbaum reported that suburban DARE students had significantly higher rates of drug use than suburban students with no exposure to the program. Similarly, a study by University of Kentucky psychologist Don Lyman followed more than 1,000 students for 10 years -- from the time they participated in DARE until they were 20-year-olds. Lyman found what just about everyone else has -- that DARE had no effect on drug use behaviour or attitude toward drugs. Since the Rosenbaum/Lyman reports, other studies have replicated their findings, and the responses of DARE officials have always been the same. Chief among these rejoinders is the claim that the studies are invalid because DARE has been improved in light of new social scientific evidence, and the studies only addressed the effects of the "old" DARE. Now, I'm all for improving drug prevention programs on the basis of the evidence, but every rejigging of DARE has failed to make a difference. The changes have therefore functioned largely as an excuse for DARE officials to ignore the scientific evidence rather than as a way of making a failed program successful. And DARE's tactics, if not the program itself, are evidently successful since the United States -- which originated the program and in which it remains enormously popular -- took a long time to come around. But it appears that the weight of evidence against DARE has finally convinced government agencies to disavow the program. In 1998, the U.S. Department of Education prohibited schools from using federal funds on DARE; since then, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the U.S. Surgeon General and the U.S. General Accounting Office have all condemned the program. Consequentially, many U.S. school boards have recently begun dropping DARE. Despite the U.S. government's disastrous drug policies -- the country still holds a National DARE Day, "blessed" by President George W. Bush, which this year fell on April 12 instead of the more appropriate April 1 -- the Americans are still light-years ahead of Canada, which continues to support DARE. There are many reasons for this, chief among them ignorance: Many teachers and parents seem unaware of the scientific evidence. They can't really be blamed for that but, astonishingly, Gary Bass, the new commanding officer for the RCMP in B.C., recently visited The Vancouver Sun's editorial board and said, after expressing his support for evidence-based policy, that there have been only "one or two studies" on DARE. When I informed him of the dozens of studies, he repeated his claim, and then finally conceded that he had seen only one or two studies. Ignorance really is bliss, I suppose. But ignorance won't help kids to make responsible choices regarding drugs --that requires knowledge. So it's time for those who are genuinely interested in addressing drug addiction to drop their opposition to the supervised injection site and to support what works. And that certainly isn't DARE. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek