School Anti-Smoking Programs Ineffective, Study Says
School-based programs that teach students how to resist the social influences that push them to smoke cigarettes--courses long popular with states and more recently with tobacco companies--have little effect and do not keep teenagers from smoking, according to a 15-year study released Tuesday.
The research, which followed 8,400 students in Washington state from third grade until after high school graduation, found that those exposed to the anti-smoking curriculum were no more likely to resist cigarette smoking than students who did not receive the almost 50 hours of training.
“This approach was started 25 years ago and has been adopted in many school districts around the country,” said Arthur V. Peterson, lead investigator for the study, which was funded by the National Cancer Institute and undertaken by the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.
“We were surprised and disappointed to see it did not produce the results predicted,” he said. “The message from the study is clear: We can’t rely on school programs alone to keep kids from smoking.”
The program studied in Washington was based on the “best practices” guidelines promoted by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Cancer Institute. It included activities such as a paper-bag puppet play for third-graders on the dangers of secondhand smoke, role-playing for middle school students on how to turn down offers of tobacco, and reenacting by high school students of testimony from landmark tobacco-liability trials about the industry’s attempts to conceal the consequences of smoking.
On the basis of earlier research, the CDC has recommended that school-based programs be implemented, along with aggressive anti-smoking media campaigns and other community-based efforts, using funds made available through the $246-billion national tobacco settlement. The anti-smoking efforts tested in the Washington study, however, were limited to the school programs alone.
Both the Philip Morris Cos. and Brown & Williamson have promoted school-based tobacco prevention programs, funding them for 250,000 teenagers in 18 states, including a statewide effort in West Virginia.
According to Philip Morris spokesman Brendan McCormick, the company researched which programs were most effective in reducing youth smoking and found that a program called Life Skills Training was widely respected. He said that the industry was funding both Life Skills programs and complementary anti-smoking media messages and after-school programs for students.
According to the new study, however, the program used in Washington state was more extensive than Life Skills. It sought to give students a clear idea of the prevalence of tobacco use and its health dangers, and to prepare them to resist peer pressure to try cigarettes.
The study followed the same students from third grade to high school graduation and found no positive effect from the program. Because of the breadth and depth of the study, researchers said it was now the “gold standard” for assessing tobacco prevention programs.
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