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Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood
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Page 1: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood

Page 2: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Vulnerability and resilience factors (1/2)

• Maturation processes described in early adolescence continue in adolescence and adulthood.

• A time when significant changes are occurring in the adolescent brain creates a potentially opportune time for poorly thought out decisions and involvement in potentially harmful behaviours, such as risky sexual behaviours, smoking and drinking, risky driving behaviours and drug use.

Page 3: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Vulnerability and resilience factors (2/2)

• Vulnerability factors related to peers and resilience factors related to mental health, personal and social skills and healthy attitude remain relevant.

• The “plasticity” and malleability of the brain continues, suggesting that also this period of development is a time when interventions can reinforce or alter earlier experiences.

• IN ADDITION, interventions delivered in settings other than the family and the school, such as the workplace, the health sector, entertainment venues and the community, become more relevant.

Page 4: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

General vulnerability factors on the achievement of developmental goals

Page 5: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Evidence-based strategies (1/2)

Page 6: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Evidence-based strategies (2/2)

Page 7: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Characteristics of evidence-based strategies linked to positive outcomes (mostly!)

Page 8: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Prevention educationCharacteristics associated with positive outcomes

• Use interactive instructional methods• Delivered through a series of structured

sessions (typically 10-15) once a week, often providing boosters sessions over multiple years

• Delivered by trained facilitator (including also trained peers)

• Provide opportunity to practice and learn a wide array of personal and social skills, including particularly coping, decision making and resistance skills, and particularly in relation to substance abuse

• Impact perceptions of risks associated with substance abuse, emphasizing immediate and appropriate consequences

• Dispel misconceptions regarding the normative nature and the expectations linked to substance abuse.

Page 9: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Prevention educationCharacteristics associated with NO or negative outocomes

• Utilise non-interactive methods, such as lecturing, as a primary delivery strategy

• Information-giving alone, particularly fear arousal• Moreover, programmes with no or negative prevention outcomes

appear to be linked to the following characteristics:– Based on unstructured dialogue sessions– Focus only on the building of self-esteem and emotional education– Address only ethical/moral decision making or values– Use ex-drug users as testimonials– Using police officers to deliver the programme

Page 10: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Policies on substance abuse in schoolsCharacteristics associated with positive outcomes

• Support normal school functioning, not disruption• Support positive school ethos, commitment to school and student participation• Policies developed with the involvement of all stakeholders (students, teachers, staff,

parents)• Policies clearly specify the substances that are targeted, as well as the locations

(school-premises) and/or occasions (school functions) the policy applies to• Apply to all in the school (student, teachers, staff, visitors, etc.)• Reduce or eliminate access to and availability of tobacco, alcohol, or other drugs• Address infractions of policies with positive sanctions by providing or referring to

counselling, treatment and other health care and psycho-social services rather than punishing

• Enforce consistently and promptly, including positive reinforcement for policy compliance.

Page 11: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Policies on substance abuse in schoolsCharacteristics associated with NO or negative outcomes

• Random drug testing

Page 12: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Addressing individual psychological vulnerabilitiesCharacteristics associated with positive outcomes

• Delivered by trained professionals (e.g. psychologist, teacher)

• Participants have been identified as possessing specific personality traits on the basis of validated instruments

• Provide participants with skills on how to positively cope with the emotions arising from their personality

• Short series of sessions (2-5)

Page 13: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

MentoringCharacteristics associated with NO or positive outcomes

• Provide adequate training and support to mentors

• Based on a very structured programme of activities

Page 14: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Alcohol and tobacco policiesCharacteristics associated with positive outcomes

• Increase in the price of tobacco and alcohol through taxation

• Increase in the minimum age of sale of tobacco and alcohol products

• Prevents the sale of tobacco and alcohol to young people under the legal age through comprehensive programmes including active and ongoing law enforcement and education of retailers through a variety of strategies (personal contact, media and information materials)

• Bans advertisement of tobacco and restrict advertisement of alcohol to youth.

Page 15: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Community-based multi-component initiativesCharacteristics associated with positive outcomes

• Promote the implementation of evidence-based strategies.

• Promote work in a range of community settings (e.g. families, schools, workplace, etc.)

• Provide training and resources to the communities.

• Promote the involvement of universities to support the implementation of evidence-based programmes and their monitoring and evaluation.

• Support communities in the medium term (e.g. longer than a year).

Page 16: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Media campaignsCharacteristics associated with positive outcomes

• Precisely identify the target group of the campaign.

• Based on a scientific theoretical basis. • Based on formative research.• Achieve adequate exposure of the target

group for an adequate period of time.• Connect to other existing drug prevention

programmes.• Target parents.• Aim at changing cultural norms about

substance abuse• Aim at educating about the consequences of

substance abuse• Aim at suggesting strategies to avoid

substance abuse

Page 17: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Media campaignsCharacteristics associated with NO or negative outcomes

• Media campaigns that are badly designed or poorly resourced should be avoided as they can worsen the situation by making the target group resistant to or dismissive of other interventions and policies.

Page 18: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Workplace preventionCharacteristics associated with positive outcomes

Page 19: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Workplace preventionCharacteristics associated with positive outcomes

• Developed with the involvement of all stakeholders (employers, management, employees)

• Guarantee confidentiality to employees• Include and are based on a policy on substance abuse in the workplace that has been

developed by all stakeholders and is non-punitive• Provide brief intervention, as well as counselling, referral to treatment and reintegration

services to employees who need them• Include a clear communication component• Embedded in other health or wellness related programmes (e.g. for the prevention of

cardiovascular diseases)• Include stress management courses• Trains managers, employees and health workers in fulfilling their roles in the

programme• Include alcohol and drug testing only as part of a comprehensive programme with the

characteristics described in the above bullet points.

Page 20: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Prevention in entertainment venuesCharacteristics associated with positive outcomes

• Trains staff and management on responsible serving and handling of intoxicated clients

• Provides counselling and treatment for staff and management who need it

• Includes a strong communication component to raise the awareness and the acceptance of the programme

• Includes the active participation of the law enforcement, health and social sectors

• Enforces existing laws

Page 21: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Brief interventionCharacteristics associated with positive outcomes

• One-to-one session(s)• Identify if there is a

substance abuse problem• Provides immediate basic

counselling and/or referral.• Delivered by a trained

professional.

Page 22: Planning an improved prevention response in adolescence and adulthood.

Thank you!

If there are no questions or comments, let’s undertake the same process as in the previous sessions!