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King, Keith A.; Wagner, Donald I.; Hedrick, Bonnie – American Journal of Health Education, 2002
Surveyed parents regarding their perceived needs in preventing their adolescents from engaging in substance use. The main needs were in learning how to teach their children to resist peer pressure to use substances and to communicate effectively with them concerning substance use. The most common resources parents used to obtain information were…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Communication Skills, Drinking, Drug Abuse
Peer reviewedTaylor, G. Stephen; Holmes, Horace, Jr. – Journal of Employment Counseling, 1990
Efforts of corporations to limit or ban smoking in the workplace have been generally unsuccessful. This article reviews the most common antismoking programs, including education, counseling and incentives, and proscriptive rules and policies. A multidimensional, broad-based smoking cessation program is then described. (Author/TE)
Descriptors: Counseling Services, Employee Assistance Programs, Health Education, Health Promotion
Peer reviewedReardon, Kathleen K.; And Others – Communication Monographs, 1989
Assesses the compliance-resisting strategies children use when rejecting pressure to smoke. Finds that strategies vary with conditions such as relationship, number of people present, amount of pressure, and risk for future smoking. Suggests that researchers consider situational variations and risk status for future smoking when developing…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Communication Research, Communication Skills
Peer reviewedKandel, Denise B.; Davies, Mark – Youth and Society, 1990
Investigates the effects of the use of cigarettes, alcohol, marijuana, and cocaine on the following aspects of labor force experience: (1) earnings; (2) stability of employment; (3) gaps between employment spells; and (4) duration of unemployment. Illicit drug use was found to have an impact on all factors except earnings. (JS)
Descriptors: Alcohol Abuse, Cocaine, Employment, Illegal Drug Use
Peer reviewedMarston, Albert R.; And Others – Adolescence, 1988
Surveyed 43 female and 34 male high school students who denied any use of drugs, alcohol, or tobacco. Compared "nonuser" sample to "user" sample. "Nonuser" students reported better physical and mental health, academic achievement, and their parents exhibited a significantly lower rate of similar problems. (Author/BH)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Comparative Analysis, Drinking, Drug Use
Peer reviewedMartin, Gary L.; Newman, Ian M. – Journal of Drug Education, 1988
Compared adolescent cigarette smoking rates determined by traditional questionnaire, random response questionnaire, and carbon monoxide test. Results from 1,160 ninth graders in 40 classrooms in 7 schools indicated that random response questionnaire elicited statistically larger proportion of smokers than did traditional questionnaire. Neither…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Comparative Testing, Evaluation Methods, Grade 9
Peer reviewedFein, Bruce – Social Science Record, 1988
Argues that the U.S. government suppression of tobacco advertising is inconsistent with the First Amendment. Cites court decisions declaring that truthful commercial speech concerning lawful activity can be suppressed only if restraint directly advances a substantial government interest. Concludes that Congress should repeal prohibition on…
Descriptors: Advertising, Civil Liberties, Consumer Protection, Federal Regulation
Peer reviewedHanauer, Peter; Pertschuk, Michael – Social Science Record, 1988
Presents arguments against Bruce Fein's article, "First Amendment Protects Tobacco Advertising." Claims Fein misconstrues the nature and purpose of tobacco advertising, that he confuses governmental paternalism with efforts to protect public health, and that he misreads the extent to which the Supreme Court protects commercial speech…
Descriptors: Advertising, Civil Liberties, Compliance (Legal), Court Litigation
Peer reviewedCurry, Susan J.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1995
Evaluates the incremental effects of the use of a self-help booklet, computer-generated personalized feedback, and outreach telephone counseling in a population-based, nonvolunteer sample of smokers. Smoking status was ascertained 3, 12 and 21 months postrandomization. Overall, the telephone counseling significantly increased smoking cessation at…
Descriptors: Adults, Counseling, Counseling Services, Feedback
Peer reviewedBailey, William J.; Crowe, James W. – Journal of School Health, 1994
Reports a national telephone survey that measured public support for seven proposals to restrict youth access to tobacco products. Nearly all respondents believed child and adolescent smoking was a serious problem. Most supported all proposed measures to restrict children's access to tobacco and to increase the cigarette excise tax. (Author/SM)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Advertising, Children, Fines (Penalties)
Peer reviewedCoker, Ann L.; And Others – Journal of School Health, 1994
An analysis of 1991 South Carolina Youth Risk Behavior Survey data explored factors associated with early age at first sexual intercourse. Nearly 50% of black males were sexually active before age 13. Carrying weapons, fighting, and early drug experimentation related to early initiation of sexual activity for all race and gender groupings. (SM)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Drinking, High School Students, High Schools
Peer reviewedPomrehn, Paul R.; And Others – Journal of Health Education, 1995
This article presents information on tobacco use initiation by middle-school students who were exposed to the Iowa Program against Smoking. From 1984 to 1989, students completed surveys on smoking status, attitudes and beliefs, and family and peer smoking. Results indicated that experimentation with tobacco was the single best predictor of regular…
Descriptors: Health Behavior, Health Promotion, Intermediate Grades, Junior High School Students
Peer reviewedDurrant, Lynne H.; And Others – Health Educator, 1994
To determine whether new (1990s) cigarette and beer magazine advertisements target young adolescents by using younger-looking models than in the 1960s, sixth and seventh graders viewed advertisements and estimated models' ages. Most students perceived the 1990s models to be under 25 and the 1960s models to be over 25 years of age. (SM)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Advertising, Drinking, Intermediate Grades
Ellickson, Phyllis L.; And Others – Health Education Quarterly, 1993
Evaluation with over 4,000 seventh and eighth graders in California and Oregon showed that Project ALERT, a curriculum to curb drug use by teaching resistance to pressures, successfully dampened cognitive risk factors for cigarette and marijuana use but had limited impact on beliefs about alcohol. (SK)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attitude Change, Beliefs, Cognitive Psychology
Peer reviewedPierce, John P.; And Others – American Journal of Public Health, 1990
Examines the long-term effects of two Australian community antismoking campaigns that used television advertising to set the community agenda. Finds that, at the beginning of the campaigns, there was an immediate 2 percent drop in male and female smoking prevalence, followed by a 1.5 percent decline per year among males. (FMW)
Descriptors: Community Programs, Drug Addiction, Drug Rehabilitation, Females

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