Title: Principles of Effective Prevention Programs
1Principles of Effective Prevention Programs
- Karol L. Kumpfer, Ph.D.
- Professor
- Dept. of Health Promotion and Education
- University of Utah
2Objectives
- Learn how to judge which programs are effective
by effect size and matching risk and protective
factors. - Identify the 9 principles or components of
successful prevention programming. - Identify the 6 characteristics of successful
program implementation. - Use the principles to select and adapt the best
model program for specific groups.
3Principles of Prevention
- The field of alcohol and drug prevention has
matured over the past 20 years. - Research has identified the most effective
prevention programs using literature reviews and
meta-analyses. - Federal agencies have lists of effective
prevention programs and practices.
4How to Decide on Best Prevention Program?
- Statistical Significance and/or Effect Sizes of
Prevention Programs - Statistical Significance only tells you that the
change in clients is not likely to have occurred
by chance. - p.lt.05 only means the change could have only
occurred by chance only 5 times in a hundred - Effect Size tells you the size of the change in
the youth getting the program versus those not
getting the program.
5SFP 10-14 Positive Results in Reduced Alcohol
Initiation
Effect Size is Difference in Reduced Alcohol
Initiation in Sixth to Eight Graders in SFP 10-14
Schools vs. No-tx Control Schools
6Better Programs Have High Effect Sizes
- An Effect Size of 1.00 means clients changed one
standard deviation. - A small effect size is generally d .00 to .30
- A medium effect size is d.31 to .60
- A large effect size is d.61 and larger
7Comparison of Average Program Effect Sizes
(Tobler Stratton, 1997 Tobler Kumpfer, 2000)
- School-based Affective -.05
- Knowledge plus Affective .05
- Life or Social Skills Training .28
- Average ES Youth-only Programs .10 ES
- Parent Skills Training .31
- Family Skills Training .82
- In-home Family Support 1.62
- Average ES Family Interventions .96 ES
8Principles of Prevention
- Federal Agencies Have Also Developed
- Lists of Prevention Principles
- Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP)
- Kumpfer and associates (NIDA, 1997)
- NIDA in Red Book 1997 2003
- Nation, et al., 2003 American Psychologist
- One Caveat Principles do not Guarantee Program
Effectiveness - Some program developers say their program works
because it was designed on the basis of
Principles of Prevention - Only actual outcomes can prove this.
9Nine Principles of Effective Prevention Programs
- 1. Comprehensive Programs
- Designed to enhance protective factors and reduce
modifiable risk factors for all forms of
substance abuse in the primary areas of
influence, such as - Individual Characteristics
- Families
- Schools
- Peers
- Community
- Focus on changing the environment to create
enduring effects (family, community, school).
10Nine Principles of Effective Prevention Programs
(cont.)
- 2. Research-based/Theory-driven Programs
- Effective programs are based on tested
theoretical models of precursors of substance
abuse, such as - Social Ecology Model (Kumpfer, et al., 2003)
- Social Development Model (Hawkins Weis, 1987)
- Prevention programs should target the precursors
or causes of unwanted behaviors early before they
begin (Hawkins Catalano, 1992).
11Nine Principles of Effective Prevention Programs
(cont.)
- 3. Tailored to Participants Needs
- Services should match the identified needs of the
potential participants - Needs assessments can help to identify needs,
such as the Communities That Care Student Survey
(Hawkins Catalano, 1992, Arthur, et al., 2000). - CTC school survey measures 45 risk and protector
factors - It can be geographically coded to show community
areas at highest need of prevention programs.
12Nine Principles of Effective Prevention Programs
(cont.)
- 4. Relevant Programs
- Prevention programs are more effective when
designed or adapted to be relevant to the target
population - Culturally-relevant
- Gender-sensitive
- Age-appropriate
- Locally relevant
- Culturally-adapted, evidence-based prevention
programs have been found to increase recruitment
and retention by as much as 40 (Kumpfer,
Alvarado, Smith, Bellamy, 2002). - What could you do to increase participation of
parents in a school family skills training
program?
13Nine Principles of Effective Prevention Programs
(cont.)
- 5. Intensive Enough to Address
- Major Needs
- The more risk and protective factors or processes
to be addressed, the greater the dosage or
intensity needed to be effective. - Combining programs increases the intensity and
improves the outcome effect sizes (Kumpfer,
Alvarado, Tait, Whiteside, 2002). - Is a 2 hour drug education program likely to be
effective for high risk youth?
14Nine Principles of Effective Prevention Programs
(cont.)
- 6. Appropriately Timed
- Prior to the unwanted behavior.
- Early enough to have an impact in changing
developmental trajectories. - At critical transition points to a new
environment, e.g., junior high or high school. - Can you think of other critical transition times
when youth are very vulnerable?
15Nine Principles of Effective Prevention Programs
(cont.)
- 7. Sufficient Follow-up or Boosters.
- Prevention effects can decay with time if no
booster sessions or reminders of skills learned. - With maturation, new material is needed that is
developmentally-appropriate and addresses new
risk factors. - Would a three month prevention program designed
for 1st to 3rd graders likely need booster
sessions or new content for 6th graders?
16Nine Principles of Effective Prevention Programs
(cont.)
- 8. Focus on Skills Development and Behavior
Change - Active, hands-on-experience increases participant
skills, even for staff training -
- Interactive teaching methods are more effective
(Tobler, 1999). - Is lecturing youth about the dangers of tobacco,
alcohol or drug abuse likely to be as effective
as having them consult expert sources and then
debate the pros and cons of use?
17Nine Principles of Effective Prevention Programs
(cont.)
- 9. Involve Youth with Prosocial Role Models
- Do not isolate high-risk youth with diagnosed
problem behaviors together in groups without
expert supervision (Dishion Andrews, 1995). - Change the group norms to more healthy norms and
values or - Clarify that the actual substance use rates or
norms are lower than youth think (Perkins
Berkowitz, 1992). - What methods can you use to accomplish this?
18Implementation Fidelity Impacts Program
Effectiveness
- Once you select the best evidence-based program,
you must implement with fidelity - Fidelity means implementing all essential
components (the core elements) as originally
designed, including - Structure
- Content
- Delivery (effective delivery only 21)
- Most practitioners tend to water down programs
in the process of locally tailoring them. - Do not shorten or add new content, but you can
adapt an exercise to be more relevant. - If the curriculum specifies a welcome exercise
where children say their name and favorite ice
cream, how would you adapt this exercise for
lactose intolerant Asian or American Indian
youth?
19Factors Contributing to Lack of Fidelity
- Lack of sufficient staff training
- Unclear training or implementation manuals
- Lack of understanding of critical elements
- Misinformation and laziness
- Lack of sufficient resources
- Money
- Staff
- Facilities
- Materials
20Characteristics of Successful Program
Implementation
- 1. Target Group Readiness and Desire for the
Program - The staff, participants, and community should be
ready to implement program - They should be aware of a substance abuse problem
and ready to change - The PREVENT model can
- help with readiness
- assessments (NIDA, 1997)
21Assessing Community Readiness to Start a
Coordinated Prevention Approach (NIDA, 1997)
- Seven key factors that must be present
- Problem defined by needs assessment
- Recognition of problem by community
- Existence of funding sources
- Vision/plan
- Energy to mobilize/sustain coalition
- Networking with stakeholders
- Talent/leadership
22Characteristics of Successful Program
Implementation (cont.)
- 2. Effective and Well Trained Staff
- The characteristics of staff are critical to
program effectiveness, such as - Warmth,
- Empathy,
- Genuineness (Truax Carkfuff, 1967)
- Staff rated more highly by clients get better
results (Park Kumpfer, 2005) - Staff training and supervision are essential for
quality implementation (Dusenbury Falco, 1995)
23Characteristics of Successful Program
Implementation (cont.)
- 3. Well Defined Plan
- FORECAST (Goodman Wandersman, 1994)
- 4. Sufficient Resources
- Food, child care, transportation, attendance
incentives,meals. - 5. Interactive, Experiential Techniques
- 6. Evaluation Linked to Improvements
24Summary
- Evidence-based Programs should be implemented
that match youth needs. - Effective programs have similar components
(comprehensive, theory-based, adapted, relevant,
intensive, age- appropriate, sufficient, change
focused, and increase positive peer interaction) - Lack of fidelity or successful implementation can
compromise effectiveness.