
This study was undertaken to evaluate the efficacy of a  skills-based CD-ROM intervention, with and without a parent component, to reduce  alcohol use among urban youth at 6-year follow-up.
At recruitment, 513  youths with a mean age of 10.8 years were randomly assigned to one of three  study arms: youth CD-ROM intervention plus parent component, youth CD-ROM  intervention only, or control. All youths completed pretest, posttest, and  annual follow-up measures. Youths and parents in their respective arms received  the initial intervention program between pretest and posttest measures and  received booster interventions between each follow-up measure.
With 80%  sample retention at 6-year follow-up, youths in both intervention arms reported  less past-month alcohol and cigarette use and fewer instances of heavy drinking  and negative alcohol-related consequences. Despite having similar numbers of  drinking peers as youths in the control arm, youths in both intervention arms  reported greater alcohol-refusal skills. Only past-month cigarette use differed  between the two intervention arms, with youths in the  intervention-plus-parent-component arm smoking less than youths in the CD-ROM  intervention-only arm.
Six years after initial intervention, youths who received a culturally tailored, skills-based prevention program had reduced alcohol use and lower rates of related risky behaviors than youths in the control arm.
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