Harm minimization in school drug education: final results of the School Health and Alcohol Harm Reduction Project (SHAHRP)

Document Type

Journal Article

Publisher

Wiley

Faculty

Faculty of Education and Arts

School

Kurongkurl Katitjin / Centre for Research in Entertainment, Arts, Technology, Education and Communications

RAS ID

8764

Comments

McBride, N., Farringdon, F., Midford, R., Meuleners, L., & Phillips, M. (2004). Harm minimization in school drug education: final results of the School Health and Alcohol Harm Reduction Project (SHAHRP). Addiction, 99(3), 278-291.

Abstract

Aims  The School Health and Alcohol Harm Reduction Project (SHAHRP study) aimed to reduce alcohol‐related harm in secondary school students. Design  The study used a quasi‐experimental research design in which randomly selected and allocated intervention and comparison groups were assessed at eight, 20 and 32 months after baseline. Setting  Metropolitan, government secondary schools in Perth, Western Australia. Participants  The sample involved over 2300 students. The retention rate was 75.9% over 32 months. Intervention  The evidence‐based intervention, a curriculum programme with an explicit harm minimization goal, was conducted in two phases over a 2‐year period. Measures  Knowledge, attitude, total alcohol consumption, risky consumption, context of use, harm associated with own use and harm associated with other people's use of alcohol. Findings  There were significant knowledge, attitude and behavioural effects early in the study, some of which were maintained for the duration of the study. The intervention group had significantly greater knowledge during the programme phases, and significantly safer alcohol‐related attitudes to final follow‐up, but both scores were converging by 32 months. Intervention students were significantly more likely to be non‐drinkers or supervised drinkers than were comparison students. During the first and second programme phases, intervention students consumed 31.4% and 31.7% less alcohol. Differences were converging 17 months after programme delivery. Intervention students were 25.7%, 33.8% and 4.2% less likely to drink to risky levels from first follow‐up onwards. The intervention reduced the harm that young people reported associated with their own use of alcohol, with intervention students experiencing 32.7%, 16.7% and 22.9% less harm from first follow‐up onwards. There was no impact on the harm that students reported from other people's use of alcohol.

DOI

10.1111/j.1360-0443.2003.00620.x

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Link to publisher version (DOI)

10.1111/j.1360-0443.2003.00620.x