Over the past five years, more than 7,500 children and youth have participated in the SPIRIT school-based substance abuse prevention program. Five school districts are currently being served: Carthage, Hickman Mills, Jennings, Knox and New Madrid school districts.
The program offers a variety of evidence-based prevention programs selected by the districts including PeaceBuilders, Positive Action, Life Skills Training, Reconnecting Youth, and Second Step. The evaluation was performed by the Missouri Institute of Mental Health (MIMH). This report provides fifth year outcomes of the main goals of the project. Download report (PDF)
|
|
|
MissouriPrevention.org is your source for information and resources for the prevention of problem behaviors; alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use; and the promotion of healthy and safe communities. MissouriPrevention is a publication of the Missouri Division of Alcohol and Drug Abuse. Our mission is to provide parents, children and youth, prevention and youth development workers, and researchers with access to the latest news and resources to help build healthy bodies and safe communities. Please feel free to contact us. We value your comments and input. We are striving to build healthy families and communities, one child at a time. Prevention News
Millions of youths use cold meds to get high
Posted Friday, January 11, 2008, 9:09 am
[Permanent Link]
WASHINGTON - About 3.1 million people between the ages of 12 to 25 or about 5 percent of the age group have used over-the-counter cough and cold medicine to get high, a U.S. government survey found.
This type of abuse has been known for years, but the 2006 survey, conducted by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration or SAMHSA, sets out the best numbers to date quantifying the problem, officials said.
Related Links: Full Story at MSNBC SAMHSA News Release
Early Exposure to Movie Smoking Predicts Later Tobacco Use
Posted Thursday, January 10, 2008, 9:18 am
[Permanent Link]
"Movies seen at the youngest ages" -- mostly rated "G," "PG," or PG-13" -- "had as much influence over later smoking behavior as the movies that children had seen recently," according to researcher Linda Titus-Ernstoff of Dartmouth Medical School, summarizing the findings of a new study. Related Links: Join Together American Journal of Pediatrics summary
Study Links Drinking With Sex
Posted Wednesday, January 09, 2008, 11:25 am
[Permanent Link]
Young adults who drink heavily are more likely than non-heavy drinkers to have multiple sex partners, studies have shown. Does the number of partners increase with the intensity of drinking? Does having a diagnosed conduct disorder affect that number? Related Links: Full story at the WashingtonPost.com
Physician Screening for Alcohol Cost-Effective but Underutilized
Posted Wednesday, January 09, 2008, 11:17 am
[Permanent Link]
A 10-minute screening and talk with a doctor about problem drinking delivers almost as much bang for the buck to the health system as childhood immunization and advice about taking aspirin to prevent stroke and heart attack, according to a new systematic review but just 8.7 percent of problem drinkers report receiving such information.
Brief intervention for alcohol is in the top-five most cost-effective preventive services, according to the research coming in equal to or higher than many common screening services like Pap smears and bowel cancer screening. Related Links: Join Together summary Center for the Advancement of Health article
Blunt touts smoke free health plan
Posted Wednesday, January 09, 2008, 11:06 am
[Permanent Link]
Gov. Blunt has proposed using a portion of the state's tobacco settlement to provide medication, counseling and doctors care to participants in MO HealthNet, the state's reconfigured Medicaid program. Related Links: Full story in the Columbia Tribune
Next >>
|
 |