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Volume 31, Issue 3: June, 2004
Abstract
Modifying Pro-Drug Risk Factors in Adolescents: Results
From Project ALERT
Bonnie Ghosh-Dastidar, PhD, Douglas L. Longshore, PhD, Phyllis
L. Ellickson, PhD, Daniel F. McCaffrey, PhD
The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of
a revised state-of-the-art drug prevention program, Project
ALERT, on risk factors for drug use in mostly rural midwestern
schools and communities. Fifty-five middle schools from South
Dakota were randomly assigned to treatment or control conditions.
Treatment-group students received 11 lessons in Grade 7 and
3 more in Grade 8. Effects for 4,276 eighth graders were assessed
18 months after baseline. Results indicate that ProjectALERT
had statistically significant effects on all the targeted
risk factors associated with cigarette and marijuana use and
more modest gains with the pro-alcohol risk factors. The program
helped adolescents at low, moderate, and high risk for future
use, with the effect sizes typically stronger for the low-
and moderate-risk groups. Thus, school-based drug prevention
programs can lower risk factors that correlate with drug use,
help low- to high-risk adolescents, and be effective in diverse
school environments.
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