Format
Scientific article
Publication Date
Published by / Citation
Thomas RE, McLellan J, Perera R Effectiveness of school-based smoking prevention curricula: systematic review and meta-analysis BMJ Open 2015;5:e006976. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-006976
Original Language

English

Keywords
smoking
school

Effectiveness of School-Based Smoking Prevention Curricula

Abstract

Objective: To assess effectiveness of school-based smoking prevention curricula keeping children never-smokers.

Design: Systematic review, meta-analysis. Data: MEDLINE (1966+), EMBASE (1974+), Cinahl, PsycINFO (1967+), ERIC (1982+), Cochrane CENTRAL, Health Star, Dissertation Abstracts, conference proceedings. Data synthesis: pooled analyses, fixed-effects models, adjusted ORs. Risk of bias assessed with Cochrane Risk of Bias tool.

Setting: 50 randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of school-based smoking curricula.

Participants: Never-smokers age 5–18 (n=143 495); follow-up ≥6 months; all countries; no date/language limitations.

Interventions: Information, social influences, social competence, combined social influences/competence and multimodal curricula.

Outcome measure: Remaining a never-smoker at follow-up.

Results: Pooling all curricula, trials with follow-up ≤1 year showed no statistically significant differences compared with controls (OR 0.91 (0.82 to 1.01)), though trials of combined social competence/social influences curricula had a significant effect on smoking prevention (7 trials, OR 0.59 (95% CI 0.41 to 0.85)). Pooling all trials with longest follow-up showed an overall significant effect in favour of the interventions (OR 0.88 (0.82 to 0.95)), as did the social competence (OR 0.65 (0.43 to 0.96)) and combined social competence/social influences curricula (OR 0.60 (0.43 to 0.83)). No effect for information, social influences or multimodal curricula. Principal findings were not sensitive to inclusion of booster sessions in curricula or to whether they were peer-led or adult-led. Differentiation into tobacco-only or multifocal curricula had a similar effect on the primary findings. Few trials assessed outcomes by gender: there were significant effects for females at both follow-up periods, but not for males.

Conclusions: RCTs of baseline never-smokers at longest follow-up found an overall significant effect with average 12% reduction in starting smoking compared with controls, but no effect for all trials pooled at ≤1 year. However, combined social competence/social influences curricula showed a significant effect at both follow-up periods.

Strengths and limitations of this study

  • This review and meta-analysis provides evidence from 50 randomised controlled trials with 143,495 participants. Comprehensive searches with no limits on data and language mean that it is unlikely trials were missed.

  • Using smoking outcomes from cohorts of baseline never-smokers provides the clearest indication of whether smoking prevention curricula are effective.

  • Statistical heterogeneity between the trials was low and results were consistent after various sensitivity analyses.

  • Not all trials reported outcomes based on cohorts of baseline never-smokers and though authors were contacted it is possible that the data may be incomplete.

  • The complexity and reporting of some curricula can make them difficult to classify and therefore the classification of curricula may not be completely accurate.