The present study sought the views of stakeholders, including school leaders and statutory stakeholders, on the content and evaluation of a classroom-based alcohol education intervention in a Randomised Controlled Trial in Scotland and Northern Ireland. Purposive sampling was used to ensure that schools from both the Intervention and Control groups were equally represented, and to ensure that similar numbers and grades of stakeholders in both countries were represented. A total of 27 participants (Male = 13 (48%); Female = 14 (52%)) engaged in a semi-structured interview prior to the end of the trial. Results suggest that: schools generally design their own alcohol education programmes; that intervention schools thought highly of the partic...
Schools are an important setting for the implementation of health education–prevention initiatives. ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 52-57)Youthful alcohol abuse and alcoholism is a growing ...
Recent independent research by the University of Liverpool has found that the Public Health Agency (...
The present study sought the views of stakeholders, including school leaders and statutory stakehold...
Background: Considerable attention has been focused on the impact of young people's alcohol use. To ...
Alcohol consumption by adolescents in the United Kingdom (UK) remains high. School-based interventio...
Background: Alcohol use in young people remains a public health concern, with adverse impacts on out...
Delaying adolescent initiation of alcohol consumption and reducing existing use is a public health p...
OBJECTIVES: To assess the effectiveness of a combined classroom curriculum and parental intervention...
Purpose: There is a lack of evidence for effective school based prevention programmes to reduce alc...
BACKGROUND: Alcohol use in young people remains a public health concern, with adverse impacts on out...
Purpose Social marketing benchmark criteria were used to understand the extent to which single-subst...
THIS paper identifies some of the key issues in the development and evaluation of an alcohol educati...
Objective: To identify elements of good practice in designing and delivering alcohol education progr...
While evidence has accumulated suggesting that prevention initiatives may have a limited impact on a...
Schools are an important setting for the implementation of health education–prevention initiatives. ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 52-57)Youthful alcohol abuse and alcoholism is a growing ...
Recent independent research by the University of Liverpool has found that the Public Health Agency (...
The present study sought the views of stakeholders, including school leaders and statutory stakehold...
Background: Considerable attention has been focused on the impact of young people's alcohol use. To ...
Alcohol consumption by adolescents in the United Kingdom (UK) remains high. School-based interventio...
Background: Alcohol use in young people remains a public health concern, with adverse impacts on out...
Delaying adolescent initiation of alcohol consumption and reducing existing use is a public health p...
OBJECTIVES: To assess the effectiveness of a combined classroom curriculum and parental intervention...
Purpose: There is a lack of evidence for effective school based prevention programmes to reduce alc...
BACKGROUND: Alcohol use in young people remains a public health concern, with adverse impacts on out...
Purpose Social marketing benchmark criteria were used to understand the extent to which single-subst...
THIS paper identifies some of the key issues in the development and evaluation of an alcohol educati...
Objective: To identify elements of good practice in designing and delivering alcohol education progr...
While evidence has accumulated suggesting that prevention initiatives may have a limited impact on a...
Schools are an important setting for the implementation of health education–prevention initiatives. ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 52-57)Youthful alcohol abuse and alcoholism is a growing ...
Recent independent research by the University of Liverpool has found that the Public Health Agency (...