|
"Reducing Drinking and Related Harms in College: Evaluation of the 'A
Matter of Degree' Program" was conducted by researchers at the Harvard
School of Public Health. Between 1997 through 2001 ten colleges with high
levels of heavy and problem drinking, along with their surrounding
communities, participated in the ongoing program. The evaluation measures
patterns of program implementation and effects of the program on frequent,
heavy and 'binge' drinking, harms and secondhand effects of alcohol
consumption. For this phase of the evaluation, drinking and harm patterns
from the ten AMOD schools were compared to patterns at 32 matched colleges
from the national Harvard School of Public Health College Alcohol Study.
Findings include that an environmental prevention program targeting heavy
and harmful drinking such as AMOD can be implemented within college
communities and that where program implementation emphasizes changes to
alcohol availability and larger cultural factors, college communities
experience significant reductions in levels of heavy alcohol consumption
including binge drinking and related harms as well as reducations in
secondhand effects. Changing the conditions that shape drinking-related
choices, opportunities and consequences for drinkers and those that supply
them with alcohol, appear to be key ingredients to an effective public
health prevention program.
American Journal of Preventive
Medicine |