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DrugScreening.org


 

Study Shows New DARE Program Helps Youths Decide Against Using Drugs
October 29, 2002

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Research Press Release

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Princeton, NJ
www.rwjf.org

Program Could Have Broader Implications Around the Country

Akron, OH - The University of Akron today released results of the evaluation of the new D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) 7th grade curriculum. The findings show improvements in students' decision-making skills, drug refusal skills, and beliefs that drug use is socially inappropriate. The new curriculum is delivered through D.A.R.E., which operates in 80 percent of U.S. school districts. The study was funded by The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

"The new D.A.R.E. curriculum comes at a critical time in light of the most recent National Household Survey report showing an increase in substance abuse among our nation's youth. These findings suggest important changes that will make D.A.R.E., which is already the largest prevention delivery system in the nation, a more effective intervention," said J. Michael McGinnis, Sr. Vice-President of The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

The research results are based on findings from an ongoing five-year study of the new D.A.R.E. science-based curriculum, which is being tested in six U.S. Cities--Detroit, Houston, Los Angeles, Newark (NJ), New Orleans, and St. Louis. The study involves over 24,000 students from 83 high schools and their 122 middle schools. Half of these high schools and middle schools were randomly assigned to receive the new D.A.R.E. program while the others were assigned to a control group for comparison purposes.

"The positive findings are very encouraging," said Dr. Zili Sloboda, the study's principal investigator. "The new curriculum showed an improvement in skills and beliefs that make students more resistant to substance abuse. Even more exciting is the fact that the new curriculum is a first step in a process for preparing children for the at-risk years."

The findings show:

  • More students decided against using drugs. The research found that decision-making skill scores for those schools receiving the new curriculum were 6 percent higher than for control group schools, including those that offered other forms of prevention education.
  • More students found drug use socially inappropriate and believed fewer peers used drugs: Results show that the schools that received the new D.A.R.E. curriculum show as much as a 19 percent reduction in normative beliefs, showing that more students perceive substance use by their peers not to be as common and acceptable.
  • More students learned how to refuse drugs: Refusal skills were significantly higher -- 5 percent -- among treatment students compared to control and comparison students.
  • Fewer students reported intent to use inhalants: Scores were significantly lower by as much as 4 percent with respect to intent to use inhalants for those students who received the new D.A.R.E. curriculum.
"This is exactly what Congress asked us to do: work with the top researchers to integrate the latest in science into the D.A.R.E program. This is great news and we will now move forward in making this state-of-the-science program available to communities across the country in September 2003," said Glenn Levant, President of D.A.R.E. America.

For more information, contact Jessica Nickel at (202) 467-8844.

Join Together publishes selected press releases on recently published research related to alcohol and drug policy, prevention, and treatment. The views expressed are those of the organization issuing the release.