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2004 (Volume 31, Number 2, pgs. 165-178)
“How All Stars Works: An Examination of Program
Effects on Mediating Variables”
Ralph B. McNeal Jr., PhD,William B. Hansen, PhD, Nancy Grant
Harrington, PhD, and Steven M. Giles, PhD
Prevention research continues to focus on school-based substance
use programs aimed at adolescents. These programs are designed
to reduce substance use and risk behavior by targeting key
mediators, such as normative beliefs, which in turn reduce
substance use. All Stars is a newly developed program that
was recently evaluated in a randomized field trial in 14 middle
schools in Lexington and Louisville, Kentucky. The authors
examined targeted and nontargeted variables as possible mediators
of program effectiveness. Findings indicate that All Stars
achieved reductions in substance use and postponed sexual
activity when teachers were successful at altering targeted
mediators: normative beliefs, lifestyle incongruence, and
manifest commitment to not use drugs. The program was not
successful when it was delivered by specialists. At least
in part, this failure is attributable to specialists’
inability to change mediators as intended by the program.
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