Evaluation of a school-based, experiential-learning smoking prevention program in promoting attitude change in adolescents

Introduction: School-based tobacco control programs exhibit great variety. Our study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of an experiential learning smoking prevention program in facilitating knowledge acquisition, forging healthy attitudes, and decreasing intention to smoke. Methods: A school-based...

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Published inTobacco induced diseases Vol. 19; no. June; pp. 1 - 10
Main Authors Mpousiou, Dimitra, Sakkas, Nikolaos, Soteriades, Elpidoforos, Toumbis, Michalis, Patrinos, Stavros, Karakatsani, Anna, Karathanassi, Areti, Raftopoulos, Vasilios, Gratziou, Christina, Katsaounou, Paraskevi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Heraklion European Publishing 01.06.2021
European Publishing on behalf of the International Society for the Prevention of Tobacco Induced Diseases (ISPTID)
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Summary:Introduction: School-based tobacco control programs exhibit great variety. Our study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of an experiential learning smoking prevention program in facilitating knowledge acquisition, forging healthy attitudes, and decreasing intention to smoke. Methods: A school-based intervention-control study was implemented during the 2016 – 2017 academic year among middle-school students in Athens, Greece. The experiential learning intervention was delivered using an interdisciplinary approach, bridging excerpts from ancient classical Greek myths, Aesop fables and ancient classical literature (Aristotle, Herodotus, Plutarch, Xenophon, Homer’s Epics), with their decoded archetypal symbols applied in a smoking and tobacco control paradigm. An anonymous selfadministered questionnaire was used at baseline and at follow-up at 3 months to evaluate program effectiveness. Results: A total of 351 students participated in our study; 181 (51.6%) in the intervention group and 170 (48.4%) in the control group. The mean age of student participants was 13 years (SD=0.96). Students in the intervention group were more likely to improve their knowledge of the adverse effects of smoking, develop attitudes against smoking and report a negative intention to smoke in the first year following the intervention, compared to the control group. Conclusions: This study provides evidence that school-based experiential learning smoking prevention programs improve smoking-related knowledge, enhance anti-smoking attitudes and reinforce negative intentions toward tobacco products.
ISSN:1617-9625
2070-7266
1617-9625
DOI:10.18332/tid/134605