Acceptability and feasibility of Strong& Deadly Futures, a culturally-inclusive alcohol and drug prevention program for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander secondary students
Although there are effective alcohol and drug prevention programs available for Australian secondary schools, no effective culturally-inclusive programs exist for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander students. To address this gap, we developed the Strong & Deadly Futures program for young pe...
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Veröffentlicht in: | SSM - mental health 2022-12, Vol.2, p.100073, Article 100073 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Although there are effective alcohol and drug prevention programs available for Australian secondary schools, no effective culturally-inclusive programs exist for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander students. To address this gap, we developed the Strong & Deadly Futures program for young people aged 12–14 years. The web-based program was developed with Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and non-Indigenous staff and students at four secondary schools (2 urban, 2 rural). This mixed-methods study reports on qualitative and quantitative feedback from students (n = 235) and school staff (n = 8) in a pilot trial to assess acceptability and feasibility of this curriculum-aligned program. Feedback indicated that students were highly engaged and motivated to learn as a result of the story-based mode of delivery, and teachers reported the ease of program implementation and adaptation. Implications for future school-based health program development are discussed. Overall, Strong & Deadly Futures appears to be an acceptable and feasible culturally-inclusive alcohol and drug prevention program. Further research will test the program's efficacy in a randomised controlled trial.
•There are no effective alcohol and drug prevention programs for Aboriginal students.•Strong & Deadly Futures aims to address this gap for Australian secondary schools.•This pilot found Strong & Deadly Futures was acceptable for students and teachers.•Implications for future school-based health program developments are discussed. |
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ISSN: | 2666-5603 2666-5603 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ssmmh.2022.100073 |