One important potential impact of national prevention media efforts such as ONDCP is on the readiness of communities to take engage in local prevention activities. Community-based efforts are valuable for several reasons: Communities can organize and find funding for quality, theory-based in-school interventions; they can insist on greater law enforcement activity concerning youth substance use; they can provide an infrastructure for institutionalizing prevention activities; they help reinforce perceptions of community norms inconsistent with youth substance use. However, while media prevention campaigns are likely to enhance the climate for community readiness, they are unlikely alone to overcome obstacles to action. The proposed study will test the effects of community readiness interventions in eight communities, as compared with effects of ONDCP media campaign exposure in eight matched control communities absent such supportive intervention. Change in both community leader perceptions of community readiness and middle/junior high school student attitudes and behaviors will be measured. This effort may help inform a new model for media interventions, coupling them with relatively efficient community mobilization efforts, to maximize their potential impact. In addition, the presence or absence of community readiness activities, including locally-based media efforts, can also serve to enhance the effectiveness of quality, theory-based in-school interventions. We will also test the effects of an in-school intervention in community readiness treatment vs. control communities. We will do so by comparing change in attitudes that mediate substance use effects as well as differential levels of change in substance use behaviors themselves, in both the short-term and in a one-year follow-up, among seventh-grade students who receive a theory-based in-school intervention compared to seventh graders in comparison schools in the same community who do not.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DA012360-05
Application #
6523039
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDA1-SXC-O (27))
Program Officer
Martin, Susan
Project Start
1998-09-30
Project End
2004-09-14
Budget Start
2002-09-01
Budget End
2004-09-14
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$395,920
Indirect Cost
Name
Colorado State University-Fort Collins
Department
Miscellaneous
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
112617480
City
Fort Collins
State
CO
Country
United States
Zip Code
80523
Slater, Michael D (2015) Reinforcing Spirals Model: Conceptualizing the Relationship Between Media Content Exposure and the Development and Maintenance of Attitudes. Media Psychol 18:370-395
Slater, Michael D; Henry, Kimberly L (2013) Prospective influence of music-related media exposure on adolescent substance-use initiation: a peer group mediation model. J Health Commun 18:291-305
Lovegrove, Peter J; Henry, Kimberly L; Slater, Michael D (2012) Examination of the Predictors of Latent Class Typologies of Bullying Involvement among Middle School Students. J Sch Violence 11:75-93
Slater, Michael D; Kelly, Kathleen J; Lawrence, Frank R et al. (2011) Assessing media campaigns linking marijuana non-use with autonomy and aspirations: ""Be Under Your Own Influence"" and ONDCP's ""Above the Influence"". Prev Sci 12:12-22
Henry, Kimberly L; Shtivelband, Annette; Comello, Maria Leonora G et al. (2011) The Belief that Alcohol Use is Inconsistent with Personal Autonomy: A Promotive Factor for Younger Adolescents. J Alcohol Drug Educ 55:37-54
Comello, Maria Leonora G (2011) Characterizing drug non-users as distinctive in prevention messages: implications of optimal distinctiveness theory. Health Commun 26:313-22
Comello, Maria Leonora G; Slater, Michael D (2011) The effects of drug-prevention messages on the accessibility of identity-related constructs. J Health Commun 16:458-69
Comello, Maria Leonora G; Slater, Michael D (2011) Effects of adverts from a drug and alcohol prevention campaign on willingness to engage in alcohol-related risky behaviors. J Health Psychol 16:1268-76
Henry, Kimberly L; Oetting, Eugene R; Slater, Michael D (2009) The Role of Attachment to Family, School, and Peers in Adolescents' Use of Alcohol: A Longitudinal Study of Within-Person and Between-Persons Effects. J Couns Psychol 56:564-572
Henry, Kimberly L (2008) Low prosocial attachment, involvement with drug-using peers, and adolescent drug use: a longitudinal examination of mediational mechanisms. Psychol Addict Behav 22:302-8

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