Community Prevention Trials for Alcohol Problems: Methodological Issues
The contributors to this volume demonstrate that it is now possible to undertake community prevention trials of alcohol-involved problems with the same precision, good design, and careful planning that has characterized similar prevention trials for heart disease and cancer prevention. This is the first book to establish a scientific basis for the integration of research into program design and in program evaluation, making it possible to determine if community programs are effective or worth the money spent for them.

In part I, the contributors address issues of outcome measures, selection of relevant community interventions, utilization of appropriate research designs and analyses, and adjustment to social and political realities. Part II reviews definitions, perspectives, and issues that provide a conceptual base for the rest of the book. Also considered are the selection and measurement of alcohol problems that may be candidate outcome variables for a community intervention study. Part III summarizes the perspectives and prior experiences of community-based approaches in other health areas (including heart disease, cancer, and adolescent health) that may be applicable to the prevention of alcohol-related problems. Experiences and implications of alcohol-prevention projects in Ontario, Texas, and Rhode Island are discussed in part IV. Part V evaluates different experimental designs, methodologies, and relative risk regression models of community-based intervention programs in alcohol prevention. The two chapters in part VI discuss the dynamic social and political realities facing community prevention trials for alcohol problems and guidelines for undertaking such trials. This book will be useful for state and local prevention program planners and evaluators, researchers in alcohol and substance abuse, teachers of applied research methods or social program development and planning, and government policy makers.

1132777492
Community Prevention Trials for Alcohol Problems: Methodological Issues
The contributors to this volume demonstrate that it is now possible to undertake community prevention trials of alcohol-involved problems with the same precision, good design, and careful planning that has characterized similar prevention trials for heart disease and cancer prevention. This is the first book to establish a scientific basis for the integration of research into program design and in program evaluation, making it possible to determine if community programs are effective or worth the money spent for them.

In part I, the contributors address issues of outcome measures, selection of relevant community interventions, utilization of appropriate research designs and analyses, and adjustment to social and political realities. Part II reviews definitions, perspectives, and issues that provide a conceptual base for the rest of the book. Also considered are the selection and measurement of alcohol problems that may be candidate outcome variables for a community intervention study. Part III summarizes the perspectives and prior experiences of community-based approaches in other health areas (including heart disease, cancer, and adolescent health) that may be applicable to the prevention of alcohol-related problems. Experiences and implications of alcohol-prevention projects in Ontario, Texas, and Rhode Island are discussed in part IV. Part V evaluates different experimental designs, methodologies, and relative risk regression models of community-based intervention programs in alcohol prevention. The two chapters in part VI discuss the dynamic social and political realities facing community prevention trials for alcohol problems and guidelines for undertaking such trials. This book will be useful for state and local prevention program planners and evaluators, researchers in alcohol and substance abuse, teachers of applied research methods or social program development and planning, and government policy makers.

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Community Prevention Trials for Alcohol Problems: Methodological Issues

Community Prevention Trials for Alcohol Problems: Methodological Issues

Community Prevention Trials for Alcohol Problems: Methodological Issues

Community Prevention Trials for Alcohol Problems: Methodological Issues

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Overview

The contributors to this volume demonstrate that it is now possible to undertake community prevention trials of alcohol-involved problems with the same precision, good design, and careful planning that has characterized similar prevention trials for heart disease and cancer prevention. This is the first book to establish a scientific basis for the integration of research into program design and in program evaluation, making it possible to determine if community programs are effective or worth the money spent for them.

In part I, the contributors address issues of outcome measures, selection of relevant community interventions, utilization of appropriate research designs and analyses, and adjustment to social and political realities. Part II reviews definitions, perspectives, and issues that provide a conceptual base for the rest of the book. Also considered are the selection and measurement of alcohol problems that may be candidate outcome variables for a community intervention study. Part III summarizes the perspectives and prior experiences of community-based approaches in other health areas (including heart disease, cancer, and adolescent health) that may be applicable to the prevention of alcohol-related problems. Experiences and implications of alcohol-prevention projects in Ontario, Texas, and Rhode Island are discussed in part IV. Part V evaluates different experimental designs, methodologies, and relative risk regression models of community-based intervention programs in alcohol prevention. The two chapters in part VI discuss the dynamic social and political realities facing community prevention trials for alcohol problems and guidelines for undertaking such trials. This book will be useful for state and local prevention program planners and evaluators, researchers in alcohol and substance abuse, teachers of applied research methods or social program development and planning, and government policy makers.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275941963
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 11/30/1992
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.81(d)
Lexile: 1460L (what's this?)

About the Author

HAROLD D. HOLDER is Director of the Prevention Research Center, one of 14 national alcohol research centers and the only one specializing in prevention. He is the editor of Control Issues in Alcohol Abuse Prevention: Strategies for States and Communities (1987).

JAN M. HOWARD is Chief, Prevention Research Branch, Division of Clinical and Prevention Research, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. She is the co-editor of Humanizing Health Care (1975).

Table of Contents

Foreword by Enoch Gordis
Introduction
Emergent Agendas for Alcohol Prevention Research by Jan Howard
Definitions of Communities and Alcohol Problems
What is a Community and what are the Implications for Prevention Trials for Reducing Alcohol Problems? by Harold D. Holder
Candidate Alcohol Problems and Implications for Measurement: General Alcohol Problems, Outcome Measures, Instrumentation, and Surrogates by Robert F. Saltz, Paul J. Gruenewald, and Michael Hennessy
Lessons and Experiences from Community Trials in Other Health Fields
Phases for Developing Community Trials: Lessons for Control of Alcohol Problems from Research in Cardiovascular Disease, Cancer, and Adolescent Health by John W. Farquhar and Stephen P. Fortmann
Designs Employed in Community Heart Disease and Cancer Prevention Projects by Thomas M. Lasater
Lessons from Early Community Prevention Efforts for Alcohol Abuse
Focusing on the Drinking Environment or the High-Risk Drinker in Prevention Projects: Limitations and Opportunities by Norman Giesbrecht and Ann Pederson
Integrating Alcohol Abuse Prevention into Community Programs for Other Health Problems: Issues and Experiences by Alfred McAlister and Elizabeth Edmundson
Prevention Experiments in the Context of Ongoing Community Process: Opportunities or Obstacles for Research by Robert L. Stout
Research Designs, Methods, and Analytic Models
Estimating the Effects of Community Prevention Trials: Alternative Designs and Methods by Charles S. Reichardt
Case-Control Studies: Can They Evaluate Preventive Measures for Reducing Alcohol Problems? by Cornelia J. Baines
Some Alternative Models Based on Relative Risk Regression for the Analysis of Community-Based Intervention Studies by Steven G. Self
Community Prevention Programs as Natural Experiments by H. Lawrence Ross
Implementing Research Designs
Protecting the Scientific Integrity of Community Intervention Studies: Confronting Social Realities by Jan Howard and Ivan Barofsky
Undertaking a Community Prevention Trial to Reduce Alcohol Problems: Translating Theoretical Models into Action by Harold D. Holder
Insights, Caveats, and Alternative Research Agendas
Promoting Comprehensive Interventions by Lawrence W. Green
Confronting Drinking Cultures by Ernestine Vanderveen
Targeting Consumption as an Endpoint by Thomas C. Harford
Focusing on Community Structure and Process by Marjorie A. Gutman
Clarifying Concepts and Terminology by David P. Byar
Replicating Community Studies by Lawrence S. Freedman
Learning from Experience by Charles S. Reichards
Analyzing Communities as Communities by Alexander C. Wagenaar
Transforming Noise into Signals by Michael Hennessy
Bibliography
Index

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