Abstract

While researchers have developed more effective programs and strategies to prevent the initiation of substance use and increasingly communities are delivering these interventions, determining the degree to which they are delivered as they were designed remains a significant research challenge. In the past several years, more attention has been given to implementation issues during the various stages of program development and diffusion. This paper presents the findings from a substudy of an evaluation of a newly designed middle and high school substance abuse prevention program, Take Charge of Your Life delivered by local Drug Abuse Resistance Education officer instructors. A key aspect of the study was to determine the extent to which implementation fidelity, using the measures of content coverage and appropriate instructional strategy, was associated with improvement in the program mediators of realistic normative beliefs, understanding the harmful effects of substance use and the acquisition of decision-making and resistance skills. Although it was found that higher fidelity was associated with better scores on some of the mediators, this was not a consistent finding. The mixed results are discussed within the context of the lesson activities themselves.

Highlights

  • While researchers have developed more effective programs and strategies to prevent the initiation of substance use and increasingly communities are delivering these interventions, determining the degree to which they are delivered as they were designed remains a significant research challenge

  • The purpose of this paper is to present findings regarding the association of implementation fidelity and the targeted mediators of a substance abuse prevention program, Take Charge of Your Life (TCYL) delivered to students when they are in the seventh and ninth grades by Drug Abuse Resistance Education (D.A.R.E.) officers

  • The analyses examining the relationship between content coverage and use of the appropriate instructional strategy and the scores on the targeted lesson mediators were conducted using hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) to estimate two-level random intercept models

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Summary

Introduction

While researchers have developed more effective programs and strategies to prevent the initiation of substance use and increasingly communities are delivering these interventions, determining the degree to which they are delivered as they were designed remains a significant research challenge. This paper presents the findings from a substudy of an evaluation of a newly designed middle and high school substance abuse prevention program, Take Charge of Your Life delivered by local Drug Abuse Resistance Education officer instructors. A key aspect of the study was to determine the extent to which implementation fidelity, using the measures of content coverage and appropriate instructional strategy, was associated with improvement in the program mediators of realistic normative beliefs, understanding the harmful effects of substance use and the acquisition of decision-making and resistance skills. The Adolescent Substance Abuse Prevention Study (ASAPS) funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and conducted by a research team at The University of Akron is designed to assess the impact of a substance abuse prevention program with components delivered to students when they are in the seventh and ninth grades (TCYL). All surveys were administered by the research staff; no school personnel or D.A.R.E. officer instructors were present during survey administration

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