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Alcohol prevention for school students: Results from a 1-year follow up of a cluster-randomised controlled trial of harm minimisation school drug education
Authors:Richard Midford  Helen Cahill  Leanne Lester  Robyn Ramsden  David Foxcroft  Lynne Venning
Institution:1. School of Education, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Australia,;2. Menzies School of Health Research, Casuarina, Australia,;3. Youth Research Centre, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia,;4. School of Sport Science, Exercise and Health, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia,;5. Royal Far West, Sydney, Australia,;6. School of Health and Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and;7. Victorian Department of Education and Training, Melbourne, Australia
Abstract:Aims: The Drug Education in Victorian Schools (DEVS) programme taught about licit and illicit drugs over two years (2010–2011), with follow up in the third year (2012). It focussed on minimising harm and employed participatory, critical-thinking and skill-focussed pedagogy. This study evaluated the programme’s residual effectiveness at follow up in reducing alcohol-related risk and harm. Methods: A cluster-randomised, controlled trial was conducted with a student cohort during years eight (13–14?years old), nine (14–15?years old) and 10 (15–16?years old). Schools were randomly allocated to the DEVS programme (14 schools, n?=?1163), or their usual drug education (7 schools, n?=?589). Multi-level models were fitted to the data, which were analysed on an intent-to-treat basis. Statistically significant findings: Over the 3 years, there was a greater increase in intervention students’ knowledge about drugs, including alcohol. Their alcohol consumption did not increase as much as controls. Their alcohol-related harms decreased, while increasing for controls. There were fewer intervention group risky drinkers, and they reduced their consumption compared to controls. Similarly, harms decreased for intervention group risky drinkers, while increasing for controls. Conclusions: Skill-focussed, harm minimisation drug education can remain effective, subsequent to programme completion, in reducing students’ alcohol consumption and harm, even with risky drinkers.
Keywords:Long-term effects  harm minimisation  alcohol  school drug education  cluster-randomised controlled trial  Australia  high school students
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