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Factors associated with adoption of evidence-based substance use prevention curricula in US school districts
Author(s) -
Louise A. Rohrbach,
Christopher L. Ringwalt,
Susan T. Ennett,
Amy A. Vincus
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
health education research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.601
H-Index - 103
eISSN - 1465-3648
pISSN - 0268-1153
DOI - 10.1093/her/cyh008
Subject(s) - curriculum , substance abuse , substance abuse prevention , medical education , drug education , substance use , sample (material) , medicine , psychology , monitoring the future , environmental health , family medicine , psychiatry , pedagogy , chemistry , chromatography
This paper examines factors associated with the adoption of evidence-based substance use prevention curricula (EBC) in a national sample of school districts. Substance abuse prevention coordinators in public school districts (n = 1593), which were affiliated with a random sample of schools that served students in Grades 5-8, completed a written survey in 1999. Results indicated that 47.5% of districts used at least one EBC in their schools with middle school grades. Substance use prevention coordinators reported they had the greatest input in decisions about curricula. In a multivariate analysis of factors positively associated with district-level decisions to adopt evidence-based programs, significant factors included input from a state substance use prevention group, use of information disseminated by the National Institute on Drug Abuse or Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, use of local needs assessment data, consideration of research showing which curricula are effective and allocation of a greater proportion of the coordinator's time to substance use prevention activities. State and federal agencies should increase their efforts to disseminate information about evidence-based programs, targeting in particular the district substance use prevention coordinator.

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