NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Mental Health and Substance Use (CREMS), National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia.
Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, USA.
Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy. 2018 Sep 25;13(1):34. doi: 10.1186/s13011-018-0171-4.
The Climate and Preventure (CAP) study was the first trial to assess and demonstrate the effectiveness of a combined universal and selective approach for preventing alcohol use and related harms among adolescents. The current paper reports universal effects from the CAP study on cannabis-related outcomes over three years.
A cluster randomized controlled trial was conducted with 2190 students from twenty-six Australian high schools (mean age: 13.3 yrs., SD 0.48). Participants were randomised to one of four conditions; universal prevention for all students (Climate); selective prevention for high-risk students (Preventure); combined universal and selective prevention (Climate and Preventure; CAP); or health education as usual (Control). Participants were assessed at baseline, post intervention (6-9 months post baseline), and at 12-, 24- and 36-months, on measures of cannabis use, knowledge and related harms. This paper compares cannabis-related knowledge, harms and cannabis use in the Control, Climate and CAP groups as specified in the protocol, using multilevel mixed linear models to assess outcomes.
Compared to Control, the Climate and CAP groups showed significantly greater increases in cannabis-related knowledge initially (p < 0.001), and had higher knowledge at the 6, 12 and 24-month follow-ups. There was no significant difference between the Climate and CAP groups. While no differences were detected between Control and the CAP and Climate groups on cannabis use or cannabis-related harms, the prevalence of these outcomes was lower than anticipated, possibly limiting power to detect intervention effects. Additional Bayesian analyses exploring confidence in accepting the null hypothesis showed there was insufficient evidence to conclude that the interventions had no effect, or to conclude that they had a meaningfully large effect.
Both the universal Climate and the combined CAP programs were effective in increasing cannabis-related knowledge for up to 2 years. The evidence was inconclusive regarding whether the interventions reduced cannabis use and cannabis-related harms. A longer-term follow-up will ascertain whether the interventions become effective in reducing these outcomes as adolescents transition into early adulthood.
This trial was registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12612000026820) on the 6th of January 2012, https://www.anzctr.org.au/Trial/Registration/TrialReview.aspx?id=347906&isReview=true.
CAP 研究是首个评估和证明在青少年中预防酒精使用和相关危害的通用和选择性方法有效性的试验。本研究报告了 CAP 研究在三年内对大麻相关结果的普遍影响。
采用 26 所澳大利亚高中 2190 名学生进行了一项群组随机对照试验(平均年龄:13.3 岁,SD0.48)。参与者被随机分配到四个条件之一;对所有学生进行通用预防(气候);对高风险学生进行选择性预防(预防);通用和选择性预防相结合(气候和预防;CAP);或常规健康教育(对照)。参与者在基线、干预后(基线后 6-9 个月)以及 12、24 和 36 个月时,使用大麻使用、知识和相关危害的措施进行评估。本文按照方案规定,比较了对照、气候和 CAP 组在大麻相关知识、危害和大麻使用方面的差异,使用多层混合线性模型评估结果。
与对照组相比,气候和 CAP 组在初始时大麻相关知识显著增加(p<0.001),并且在 6、12 和 24 个月的随访中知识水平更高。气候组和 CAP 组之间没有显著差异。虽然对照组与 CAP 和气候组在大麻使用或大麻相关危害方面没有差异,但这些结果的发生率低于预期,这可能限制了检测干预效果的能力。探索接受零假设置信度的额外贝叶斯分析表明,没有足够的证据表明干预措施没有效果,或者表明它们具有有意义的大效果。
通用的气候和联合的 CAP 方案都能在 2 年内有效提高大麻相关知识。关于干预措施是否减少大麻使用和大麻相关危害的证据尚无定论。长期随访将确定这些干预措施是否在青少年进入成年早期时有效减少这些结果。
该试验于 2012 年 1 月 6 日在澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册中心(ACTRN12612000026820)注册,https://www.anzctr.org.au/Trial/Registration/TrialReview.aspx?id=347906&isReview=true。