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Empirical Assessment of the Above The Influence Advertising Campaign

NCJ Number
238045
Journal
Journal of Drug Education Volume: 41 Issue: 4 Dated: 2011 Pages: 431-461
Author(s)
Lawrence M. Scheier, Ph.D.; Jerry L. Grenard, Ph.D.; Kristen D. Holtz, Ph.D.
Date Published
2011
Length
31 pages
Annotation
This study investigated the ability of Above the Influence, a national advertising campaign aimed at deterring and reducing drug use among young people.
Abstract
This study evaluated the efficacy of Above the Influence (ATI), a national media-based health persuasion campaign to deter youth drug use. The campaign uses public service anti-drug prevention messages and targets youth between the ages of 14 and 16, a period of heightened susceptibility to peer influences. The evaluation utilized mall intercepts from geographically dispersed regions of the country. Theoretical impetus for the campaign combines elements of the theory of reasoned action (TRA), persuasion theory, and the health belief model. A series of structural equation models were tested with 4 randomly drawn cross-validation samples (N = 3,000). Findings suggest that awareness of ATI is associated with greater anti-drug beliefs, fewer drug use intentions, and less marijuana use. Congruent with the TRA, changes in beliefs and intentions are intermediate steps linking campaign awareness with behavior. This study provides further evidence of positive campaign effects and may strengthen reliance on mass media health persuasion campaigns as a useful adjunct to other programs targeting youth. (Published Abstract)