4.5 Article

Evaluating a school-based science program that teaches the physiological effects of nicotine

Journal

ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS
Volume 114, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2020.106744

Keywords

Planarians; Behavior; Education; Drug prevention; Addiction; Nicotine

Funding

  1. NCATS NIH HHS [UL1 TR001857] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDA NIH HHS [P30 DA013429, R25 DA033270] Funding Source: Medline

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School-based drug prevention programs aim to educate students about the physiological and addictive effects of drugs. Using nicotine-induced behaviors in planarians, this program successfully increased students' knowledge about nicotine, with a particularly significant impact on 6th grade students.
School-based drug prevention programs represent a widely endorsed public health goal, with an important aspect of knowledge-based curricula being education about the physiological effects of drugs. Nicotine is one of the world's most addictive substances and in this program we have used nicotine-induced mammalian-like behaviors in flatworms called planarians to successfully teach students (4th-12th grade; n = 1,616 students) about the physiological and addictive effects of nicotine. An initial study tested the change in knowledge about addictive substances in 6th-12th grade students after they completed a lab examining the effects of two concentrations of nicotine on the number of stereotypies (C-shaped spasms) planarians demonstrate in a 5-minute period of time. Lab discussion focused on developing and testing hypotheses, measurement reliability, and mechanisms of nicotine action. Surveys given pre- and post-lab experience showed that 6th grade students have significantly lower knowledge about nicotine than 7th-12th grade students (6th grade: 40.65 +/- 0.78% correct, 7th-12th grade: 59.29 +/- 1.71%, p < 0.001) pre-lab, but that students in all grades showed a significant increase in knowledge post-lab (p < 0.001). In 6th grade the lab was effective in improving knowledge about nicotine in urban, suburban and rural schools, p < 0.001, with students in suburban schools showing significantly greater knowledge both pre-test (urban: 37.62 +/- 1.45%; suburban: 48.78 +/- 1.62%; rural: 37.33 +/- 0.99%; p < 0.001) and post-test (urban:60.60 +/- 1.85%; suburban: 67.54 +/- 1.82%; urban: 61.66 +/- 1.18%; p < 0.001). A second study, modifying the lab so that the time spent observing the planarians is reduced to a 1-minute period, showed that students in both 4th and 5th grades had a significant increase in knowledge about the physiological and addictive effects of nicotine post-lab (p < 0.001).

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