PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study: Affordable trial programs prevented youth substance misuse

2025-08-06
(Press-News.org)

While overdose deaths in the U.S. sharply declined in 2024, they remain high. Almost 90,000 Americans died from drug overdoses between October 2023 and September 2024. Overdose death rates are particularly high in American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) people.

The earlier someone starts substance use, the more likely they are to have substance use problems later in life. So, it is important to work with young people to prevent substance use early in life. Researchers at Emory’s Rollins School of Public Health recently partnered with Cherokee Nation Behavioral Health to design and implement programs to help prevent youth substance use in their community. 

They created two programs. Connect Kits for Family Action delivers activity kits to families of teens in 10th to 12th grade to help strengthen family relationships. Connect Brief Intervention uses technology to deliver individualized coaching to high school students.

Testing the Programs

A randomized trial of the interventions, with results published in the American Journal of Public Health, found that they worked to reduce alcohol and other substance use in high school students in rural Oklahoma.

In the trial, Cherokee Nation Behavioral Health implemented the programs at 10 high schools. Ten other schools did not receive programming to serve as a comparison. The 10 high schools that did not receive the programs during the trial received them after the study ended. Most students at participating schools were either white or AI/AN.

The trial lasted for three years, and students completed surveys every six months to report on their alcohol and substance use.

What They Found

Students at the schools that received the intervention had lower alcohol and other substance use than students at the comparison schools.

Every six months, these students reported:

18% less alcohol use 26% less binge drinking 11% less cannabis use 40% less prescription opioid misuse

Why This Matters

“Adolescent substance use poses serious risks to health, academic achievement, and long-term well-being. Therefore, protecting teens from substance use is key to helping them thrive,” says Kelli Komro, PhD, professor of behavioral, social, and health education sciences at Rollins and project co-lead. 

“Our prevention programs have demonstrated measurable success in reducing alcohol and drug use among high school students. We’re proud of the results and excited to share these adaptable, effective solutions with other communities.”

Juli Skinner, director of behavioral health for Cherokee Nation stresses the importance of this work.

“We believe our children are our most valuable resource,” she says. “This project allowed us to work within our own reservation to find ways that affect change in our youth. Our partnership with Emory University and area high schools was vital in making this happen. We learned so much from the challenges we encountered during this trial, making it more effective and sustainable. The improved outcomes from this trial will last into the future generations of our Cherokee families and communities.”   

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Better access to technology can help African Americans bridge the healthcare gap

2025-08-06
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Researchers at UC Santa Barbara have found that better access to technology can go a long way toward achieving equity in healthcare for African Americans in the United States. According to Sharon Tettegah and Ebenezer Larnyo, both researchers at UCSB’s Center for Black Studies Research (CBSR), leveraging health technology is a promising strategy for addressing longstanding healthcare disparities “by enhancing access to care, improving its quality and reducing inequities.” “Our study shows that improving access to technology like broadband internet and smartphones, and healthcare technology use like ...

Higher risk of ischemic stroke at young age after pregnancy complications

2025-08-06
The study examined over a thousand women aged 18 to 49. Of these, 358 had suffered an ischemic stroke. Researchers compared the pregnancy histories of these women with those of 714 women who had not experienced a stroke. The results showed that more than half of the women who had an ischemic stroke had experienced at least one complication during pregnancy. In the group without ischemic stroke, this was one-third.    Women who had experienced a stillbirth were found to be nearly five times more likely to ...

Complicated pregnancies linked to higher risk of early stroke

2025-08-06
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4:00 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2025 MINNEAPOLIS – Experiencing complications during pregnancy is linked with a higher risk of stroke before age 50, according to a study published August 6, 2025, in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Researchers found female participants who had certain pregnancy complications were more likely to have an early stroke. These included preeclampsia, preterm birth, gestational diabetes, miscarriage and stillbirth. The study does not prove that pregnancy complications cause stroke. It only shows an association. “While the ...

American Society of Anesthesiologists hosts ANESTHESIOLOGY® 2025

2025-08-06
CHICAGO – Older patients whose primary language is not English may be at greater risk for delirium after surgery in American hospitals. People who struggle with food insecurity or loneliness may be more likely to experience chronic pain after surgery. Fentanyl overdose deaths in older adults are rising at similar rates to younger people. When anesthesiologists lead preoperative care for hip fractures, patients get to the operating room faster and recover better. These findings and other timely research ...

Cockatoos perform 30 distinct dance moves and may combine them in unique ways

2025-08-06
Captive cockatoos have at least 30 different dance moves in their repertoire, including headbanging and body rolls, according to a study by Natasha Lubke at Charles Sturt University in Australia, and colleagues, publishing August 6, 2025 in the open-access journal PLOS One. The moves, of which 17 are newly identified, may be performed with or without music. Several species of parrot have been anecdotally observed dancing to music in captivity. Dancing results from complex brain processes including imitation, ...

Common patterns found among scientists with remarkable early-career citation success

2025-08-06
A new analysis of data on scientists with exceptional early-career success—according to a metric known as citation impact—has identified common characteristics among them, some of which could also be indicators of problematic or fraudulent behaviors. John Ioannidis of Stanford University, U.S., presents these findings in the open-access journal PLOS One on August 6, 2025. Citation impact reflects a scientist’s overall influence in their field, which depends, in part, on the number of ...

Adolescent girls who have weight concerns despite not being obese are more likely to also experience depression and suicidality, per Korean survey of more than 50,000 middle and high school students

2025-08-06
Adolescent girls who have weight concerns despite not being obese are more likely to also experience depression and suicidality, per Korean survey of more than 50,000 middle and high school students Article URL: http://plos.io/4m9mewW Article title: Sex differences in the association of BMI and weight perception with depression and suicidality among Korean adolescents Author countries: Republic of Korea Funding: The author(s) received no specific funding for this work. END ...

What’s in your pup’s bowl? Heavy metals, reveals 10-state survey

2025-08-06
Two-thirds of dogs tested in a recent survey consume higher-than-recommended levels of heavy metals in their drinking water, according to a study published August 6, 2025 in the open-access journal PLOS Water by Audrey Ruple from Virginia Tech, U.S., and colleagues. The survey, which focused on well water households in 10 states, uncovered 13 instances where arsenic, lead and copper tested above EPA-recommended levels.  Roughly 15 million U.S. households use private well water and are not protected by the EPA’s Safe Drinking Water Act, which regulates safety testing in drinking water. These households — and the canine companions inside — ...

Ocean sediments might support theory that comet impact triggered Younger Dryas cool-off

2025-08-06
Analysis of ocean sediments has surfaced geochemical clues in line with the possibility that an encounter with a disintegrating comet 12,800 years ago in the Northern Hemisphere triggered rapid cooling of Earth’s air and ocean. Christopher Moore of the University of South Carolina, U.S., and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS One on August 6, 2025. During the abrupt cool-off—the Younger Dryas event—temperatures dropped about 10 degrees Celsius in a year or less, with cooler temperatures lasting about 1,200 years. Many researchers believe that no comet was ...

Waiting in line: Why six feet of social distancing may not be enough

2025-08-06
August 6, 2025        Waiting in Line: Why Six Feet of Social Distancing May Not Be Enough Study, led by undergraduate physics majors at UMass Amherst and researchers at University of Cadiz, sharpens our understanding of how airborne-communicable diseases travel   AMHERST, Mass. – We all remember the advice frequently repeated during the COVID pandemic: maintain six feet of distance from every other human when waiting in a line to avoid transmitting the virus. While reasonable, the advice did not take into account the complicated fluid dynamics governing how the airborne particles ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

ChatGPT is smart, but no match for the most creative humans

Mystery of how turtles read their magnetic map solved: they feel the magnetism

From smartphone stethoscopes to voice-detected heart failure,  innovations take centre stage at ESC Digital & AI Summit   

How and when could AI be used in emergency medicine?

Report yields roadmap for Americans to age with health, wealth, and social equity

Pain research reveals new detail of how synapses strengthen

Hidden process behind 2025 Santorini earthquakes uncovered

Giant impactor Theia formed in the inner Solar System

Rebalancing lung repair with immune damage is key to surviving severe influenza

2025 Santorini seismic unrest triggered by “pumping” magma flow

Toxic gut bacteria may drive ulcerative colitis by killing protective immune cells

Rethinking where language comes from

Subverting plasmids to combat antibiotic resistance

Theia and Earth were neighbors

Calcium “waves” shape flies’ eyes

Scientists uncover new on-switch for pain signaling pathway that could lead to safer treatment and relief

Modeling of electrostatic and contact interaction between low-velocity lunar dust and spacecraft

Building a sustainable metals infrastructure: NIST report highlights key strategies

Discovering America’s ‘epilepsy belt’: First-of-its-kind national study reveals US regions with high epilepsy rates among older adults

Texting helps UCSF reach more patients with needed care

Working together to combat the spread of antibiotic resistance

Developing dehydration and other age-related conditions following major surgery linked to dramatically worse outcomes for older adults

Aged blood vessel cells drive metabolic diseases

This moss survived 9 months directly exposed to the elements of space

UC San Diego researchers develop new tool to predict how bacteria influence health

Prediction of optic disc edema progression during spaceflight

Age-based screening for lung cancer surveillance in the US

Study reveals long-term associations of strangulation-related brain injury from intimate partner violence

Monsoon storms will bring heavier rains but become weaker

New therapeutic strategies show promise against a hard-to-treat prostate cancer

[Press-News.org] Study: Affordable trial programs prevented youth substance misuse