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Volume 29, Issue 6: December, 2002
Abstract
Curtailing Tobacco Use Among Youth: Evaluation of Project
4-Health
Carol N. D’Onofrio, DrPH, Joel M. Moskowitz, PhD and
Marc T. Braverman, PhD
This article reports the development and evaluation of Project
4-Health, a theory-driven, research-based program to prevent
tobacco use among youth enrolled in 4-H clubs throughout California.
Additional goals were to involve youth in discouraging others’
tobacco use and to develop youth leadership for tobacco control.
To assess program effectiveness, 72 clubs were matched and
randomly assigned to the program or control condition. Of
1,853 eligible club members, 88.6% completed the pretest.
Of these, 79.5% completed a posttest 4 months after conclusion
of program delivery, and 77.6% completed a second posttest
2 years later. Short-term effects were found on 7 of 24 outcome
measures, indicating changes in knowledge, attitudes, and
behavioral intention, but not in social influence variables
or behaviors. No long-term effects were observed. Discussion
considers how the challenges of designing, delivering, and
evaluating the intervention influenced results and implications
for preventing tobacco use through community-based youth groups.
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