Dignan M B, Block G D, Steckler A, Cosby M
J Sch Health. 1985 Mar;55(3):103-6. doi: 10.1111/j.1746-1561.1985.tb04090.x.
Seventh grade students in two school systems in rural North Carolina were subjects for a program designed to reduce health risks associated with use/abuse of tobacco and alcohol. One school system was located in the central area of the state, and the other in the western mountains. Both groups were assessed before and after introduction of novel teaching programs dealing with alcohol and tobacco. Knowledge about smoking and alcohol increased in both sites (p less than .05). Attitudes toward alcohol did not change. Attitudes toward smoking eroded in both sites, with attitudes at one site showing a severe erosion (p less than .05). Smoking education in these communities may have conflicted strongly with ambient attitudes toward smoking, eliciting a "boomerang" effect.
北卡罗来纳州农村地区两个学校系统的七年级学生参与了一项旨在降低与烟草和酒精使用/滥用相关健康风险的项目。一个学校系统位于该州中部地区,另一个位于西部山区。在引入有关酒精和烟草的新型教学项目前后,对两组学生都进行了评估。两个地区关于吸烟和酒精的知识都有所增加(p值小于0.05)。对酒精的态度没有改变。两个地区对吸烟的态度都有所削弱,其中一个地区的态度出现了严重削弱(p值小于0.05)。这些社区的吸烟教育可能与对吸烟的周边态度存在强烈冲突,从而引发了“反效果”。