Pubdate: Sat, 28 Aug 1999 Source: Standard-Times (MA) Copyright: 1999 The Standard-Times Contact: 25 Elm Street, New Bedford, MA 02740 Website: http://www.s-t.com/ Forum: http://www.s-t.com/cgi-bin/Ultimate.cgi?actionintro ANTI-DRUG PROGRAM IS 'ONLY A PIECE OF THE PUZZLE' Working parents are especially vulnerable to criticism when children misbehave. Any children. The rationale is that if mothers would just stay home, America's children would not join gangs, use drugs, purchase guns or shoot other children. In 1997 there were 13.9 million current users of any illicit drug in the total household population ages 12 and older. Some of those drug users were stay-at-home parents, and statistics support that children learn their behavior from the people who are influential in their lives. Drug use among 12- to 17-year-olds actually declined slightly in 1998. Still, every day more than 6,000 people ages 18 or younger try their first cigarette and more than 3,000 become daily smokers. Nicotine is a drug and smoking affects youth's attitude about marijuana use. Illegal drugs cost our society approximately $110 billion each year. More than 60 percent of the adult males arrested in 20 major cities tested positive for drugs. America is fighting back with an enhanced National Drug Control Strategy. According to D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) what is needed to prevent drug use is a multi-disciplinary, multi-media approach. To combat peer pressure, D.A.R.E. has created a series of public service announcements that are used as part of a new, ongoing media campaign to provide positive role models who have achieved their dreams by staying drug-free. Parents, working or not, can provide the most effective role models. They must take the time to talk with their children about drugs, school, and the use of tobacco. It's never too early to start. And, too, parents should practice what they preach. Those who tell their children not to use drugs or smoke, while holding a martini and a cigarette, do not provide effective role models. D.A.R.E. claims to have conducted numerous studies that prove its approach is making a difference in the lives of young people around the country. Not all researchers agree. While Project D.A.R.E. may be one of the most popular drug education programs in the country, one new study finds the program has no long-term effect on drug use. Psychologist Donald Lynam, Ph.D., and other researchers at the University of Kentucky tracked more than 1,000 Midwestern students who participated in Project D.A.R.E. while in the sixth grade. These students were again evaluated at age 20, 10 years after receiving the drug prevention education. Although the D.A.R.E. intervention produced a few initial improvements in the students' attitude toward drug use, researchers found these changes did not persist over time. Lynam emphasizes this doesn't mean that nothing should be done to prevent drug use among young people. "Some youth will use drugs and this will likely affect their lives in negative ways. We should try to do something for these youth, but D.A.R.E. is probably not the only thing to do," said Lynam. If it's not effective, why does D.A.R.E. remain so popular with parents and school personnel? "First, teaching children to refrain from drug use is a widely accepted approach with which few individuals will argue," Lynam said. "Similar to other such interventions, such as the 'good touch/bad touch' programs to prevent sexual abuse, these 'feel-good' programs are ones that everyone can support, and critical examination of their effectiveness may not be perceived as necessary." Lynam points out that, "The most damaging aspect of utilizing an ineffective approach is that parents and teachers get comfortable with the idea that something is being done about our drug problems and that leads them into complacency." Dan Frazell, president of the National Drug Organization, confirms that, "D.A.R.E. is only a piece of the puzzle. But an effective piece." The 1997 Minnesota Institute of Public Health study concluded that 98 percent of those surveyed said D.A.R.E. had fostered a better relationship with law enforcement. Ninety-six percent said D.A.R.E. was an important part of the school's overall drug program and 88 percent favored extending the program to junior and senior high school levels. Researcher Susan Ennett of the Center for Social Research and Policy Analysis in Raleigh, N.C., found that the more interactive a program is, the more effect it appears to have. "It may be unrealistic to expect any universal program to be effective," Ennett suggests. "Not all kids are at risk. Maybe we can do better with more intensive and targeted interventions." Lynam says he doesn't advocate getting rid of D.A.R.E. "If I had to choose between using nothing or using D.A.R.E, I'd say let's use it ... but start working on developing more effective drug prevention programs." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck