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Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse Prof. William Crano UNODC Consultant Professor of Psychology, Claremont Graduate University, USA
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Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Jan 07, 2016

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Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse. Prof. William Crano UNODC Consultant Professor of Psychology, Claremont Graduate University, USA. Can Mass Media Reduce Illicit Substance Use?. Characteristics of successful media campaigns. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Prof. William CranoUNODC ConsultantProfessor of Psychology,Claremont Graduate University, USA

Page 2: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Can Mass Media Reduce Illicit Substance Use?

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Page 3: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Characteristics of successful media campaigns

• Always based on established theories of persuasion, not whim or “common sense”

• Usually used subtle message appeals, not extreme threats or extremely directive language, which often had adverse effects

• Often appealed to parents, or were associated with parental monitoring

• Sometimes were designed to educate parents about the dangers of substance misuse

• Sometimes involved larger efforts, including school & community

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Page 4: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Why have our media-based efforts often failed?

• The recipe for failure. Unsuccessful campaigns were:– Never based on established theories of message-based

persuasion, but rather apparently reasonable ideas about what to say, and how to say it

– Almost always obviously manipulative– Often used fear-based appeals, that made unrealistic threats,

that were easily disproved or inconsistent with experience– Never appealed to, or involved parents, schools, or the larger

community

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Page 5: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

What to do?

A quick review of the process of persuasive change

Page 6: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Assume resistance by the audience

• If your suggestion is contrary to the beliefs or intentions of the audience, they will resist by:– Disconfirming the logic of the message– Debasing source of the message– Distorting the message (biased misunderstanding)

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Page 7: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

How can a message be persuasive?

• Raise question in receiver’s mind about the advisability of an action or belief, with strong communications that are difficult to counter

• Provide an answer to the question• Target or tailor the persuasive message to unique

susceptibilities of the group or individual to enhance message effects

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Page 8: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

The signature ad of the National Youth Anti-drug Media Campaign – What do you think of it?

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Page 9: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

The goals

• Make counter-argumentation difficult, impossible, or apparently unnecessary.

• Ensure message source is viewed as expert.• Tailor the persuasive message to unique susceptibilities

of the group or individual to enhance message effects. Choose your target!– Do you want to reinforce resolute nonusers?– Or, persuade those who are contemplating drug use to resist?– Or, influence users to quit?

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Page 10: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

How to beat counter-argumentation

• Use sources who have nothing to gain by audience’s agreement (expert, scientist, trusted media person, etc.)

• Make counter-arguing difficult by media overload or distraction (highly media active presentation that captures attention and lowers ability to counter-argue)

• Misdirection: vary the apparent target of persuasion; good chance of persistent change if message is strong.

Page 11: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Example of misdirection

• “Parents [Students], I’d like to talk to you today about an important issue…message attacked illicit substance use– Middle-school youth significantly more persuaded by

“Parents” ad. Why counter-argue a message to Mom?• Arizona anti-smoking campaign –

• Second hand smoke ads directed to parents worked… on adolescents as well as parents!

• Both of these studies succeeded because the audience did not recognize the need to counter-argue

Page 12: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

The “Parents” Campaign

• Parents – the anti-drug– Unlike more costly campaigns, this smaller scale national

campaign had a positive impact on adolescents’ drug use

• Why?– Most obviously, parents became more aware and monitored

children more closely– Less obviously, children saw the ads, and did not counter-

argue – why bother? The ad was directed at Mama

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Page 13: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Can parents really have a major impact on their adolescent children?

If so, can insights from studies of parents’ effects be transferred to mass media campaigns?

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Page 14: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

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Page 15: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Effects of parental monitoring

• Analysis combined data of 17 studies involving 35,000 (parent and child) pairs of respondents

• Studied link between parental monitoring and their adolescent children’s marijuana use

• Results indicated a significant relation between monitoring and adolescent marijuana use: Greater monitoring = less use– Stronger association in girls than boys– Stronger when monitoring was defined strictly in terms of open

communication between parents and children– Strong evidence against chance (7,358 studies of nil effects required to

render overall result statistically non-significant).

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Page 16: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Implications for policy makers (1/2)

• Choose and target your audience [users, intenders, resolute nonusers]

• Message must:– Raise question– Provide answer– Reinforce acceptance

• Carefully work to overcome counter-arguments. • Do not over-promise or over-threaten: the scalpel is

more effective than the axe

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Page 17: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

Implications for policy makers (2/2)

• Involve experts on theories of persuasion and communication (the ‘creative people’ are not enough!)

• Use formative research and evaluate, evaluate, evaluate

• Involve research institutions and universities

• Involve parents if possible • If it is not possible, make it possible

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Page 18: Using media for the prevention of drug use and substance abuse

A parting note from the author of these slides

• The requirements I have discussed are not difficult, but they are unforgiving. They require knowledge and motivation. I have tried to provide some knowledge and hopefully, much motivation

• Creative ads are wonderful, if they follow these rules; if not, they are a waste of time, energy, and scarce resources

• Thank you for your kind attention. I wish you all the best in your important work

• Prof. William Crano, Professor of Psychology, Claremont Graduate University, USA.

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