
@article{ref1,
title="Project Towards No Drug Abuse: A Review of the Findings and Future Directions",
journal="American journal of health behavior",
year="2002",
author="Sussman, Steve and Dent, Clyde W. and Stacy, Alan W.",
volume="26",
number="5",
pages="354-364",
abstract="OBJECTIVE: To provide a review of the evidence from 3 experimental trials of Project Towards No Drug Abuse (TND), a senior-high-school-based drug abuse prevention program. METHODS: Theoretical concepts, subjects, designs, hypotheses, findings, and conclusions of these trials are presented. A total of 2,468 high school youth from 42 schools in southern California were surveyed. RESULTS: The Project TND curriculum shows reductions in the use of cigarettes, alcohol, marijuana, hard drugs, weapon carrying, and victimization. Most of these results were replicated across the 3 trials. CONCLUSION: Project TND is an effective drug and violence prevention program for older teens, at least for one-year follow-up. (Abstract Adapted from Source: American Journal of Health Behavior, 2002. Copyright © 2002 by the American Academy of Health Behavior)For more information on Project Towards No Drug Abuse, a Blueprints for Violence Prevention Model Program, see VioPro record number 940.Blueprints Model ReferenceCaliforniaSenior High School StudentGrade 9Grade 10Grade 11Grade 12Late AdolescenceEarly AdolescenceJuvenile Substance UseSubstance Use PreventionDrug Use PreventionSchool BasedProgram EffectivenessProgram EvaluationAlcohol Use PreventionTobacco Use PreventionSmokingMarijuana UseJuvenile Weapons CarryingJuvenile Firearms CarryingFirearms Carrying PreventionWeapons Carrying PreventionVictimization PreventionJuvenile Victim10-04<p />",
language="en",
issn="1087-3244",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}