The entries below summarise documents collected by Drug and Alcohol Findings. Citation here does not imply that these documents are particularly relevant to Britain and of particular merit, though they may well be both. The original documents were not published by Findings; click on the Titles to obtain copies. Free reprints may also be available from the authors; if displayed, click Request reprint to send or adapt the pre-prepared e-mail message. The Summary is intended to convey the findings and views expressed in the study. Below may be comments from Drug and Alcohol Findings. Links to source documents are in blue. Hover mouse over orange text for explanatory notes.
In this new bag of studies are mixed but always instructive results from substance use prevention and early intervention attempts across the life stages from school to college and work. The negative school studies raise questions about relying on developer-led evaluations and about whether promising programmes really will work in the real world. Can colleges get away with sitting new students in front of a computer to learn how to drink safely, and will brief alcohol counselling really leave companies more than a thousand dollars better off? It takes more ' a new family ' to help the most severely problematic Norwegian teenagers.
Leading US school-based prevention programme fails independent test ...
No success for school counselling/education for troubled US teens ...
US college uses internet to start new students drinking more safely...
Prison alternative turns round lives of child substance users with multiple problems ...
Productivity savings for US firms which counsel risky drinking staff ...