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Primary prevention for alcohol misuse in young peopleFoxcroft D, Ireland D, Lowe G, Breen R SummaryPrimary prevention for alcohol misuse in young peopleMany studies that have evaluated educational and psychosocial prevention programmes were considered and appraised in this systematic review. A number of programmes showed evidence of ineffectiveness. Those that reported longer-term evaluations (over three years follow-up) were examined in more detail and several promising studies were re-analysed to provide a better indication of the potential impact of the prevention programme. On the basis of this re-analysis, the Strengthening Families Programme (SFP) in particular but also culturally focused skills training appear to offer promise. However, all of the studies included in the review showed some methodological weaknesses and it is therefore necessary to replicate these studies with more robust design and analysis, and across different settings.
This is a Cochrane review abstract and plain language summary, prepared and maintained by The Cochrane Collaboration, currently published in The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2008 Issue 3, Copyright © 2008 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.. The full text of the review is available in The Cochrane Library (ISSN 1464-780X).
This version first published online:
July 22. 2002 AbstractBackgroundAlcohol misuse is a cause of concern for health services, policy makers, prevention workers, the criminal justice system, youth workers, teachers and parents. Objectives1. To identify and summarize rigorous evaluations of psychosocial and educational interventions aimed at the primary prevention of alcohol misuse by young people. Search strategyDatabases searched (no time limits): Project CORK, BIDS, PSYCLIT, ERIC, ASSIA, MEDLINE, FAMILY-RESOURCES-DATABASE, HEALTH-PERIODICALS-DATABASE, EMBASE, BIDS, Dissertation-Abstracts, SIGLE, DRUG-INFO, SOMED, Social-Work-Abstracts, National-Clearinghouse-on-Alcohol-and-Drug-Information, Mental-Health-Abstracts, DRUG-database, ETOH (all searched Feb-June 2002). Selection criteria1. randomised controlled and non-randomised controlled and interrupted time series designs. Data collection and analysisStage 1: All papers screened by one reviewer against inclusion criteria. Main results20 of the 56 studies included showed evidence of ineffectiveness. No firm conclusions about the effectiveness of prevention interventions in the short- and medium-term were possible. Over the longer-term, the Strengthening Families Program (SFP) showed promise as an effective prevention intervention. The Number Needed to Treat (NNT) for the SFP over 4 years for three alcohol initiation behaviours (alcohol use, alcohol use without permission and first drunkeness) was 9 (for all three behaviours). One study also highlighted the potential value of culturally focused skills training over the longer-term (NNT=17 over three-and-a-half years for 4+ drinks in the last week). Authors' conclusions1. Research into important outcome variables needs to be undertaken. |