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Case professor receives federal grant to develop family-based drug abuse, AIDS prevention program

For immediate release: November 12, 2003
For more information, contact George Stamatis at 216-368-3635 or george.stamatis@case.edu

CLEVELAND—U.S. Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones announced Oct. 27 that the federal government's Center for Substance Abuse Prevention awarded a three-year $1 million grant to Case Western Reserve University/University Hospitals of Cleveland Department of Family Medicine.

The YWCA of Greater Cleveland and Music and Performing Arts (M&PA) at Trinity Cathedral are collaborating on the project. The YWCA will offer a family-based substance use and HIV/AIDS prevention program to teens and parents. M&PA will implement the art program, and researchers will measure whether participation in the arts contributes to the success of the prevention program.

The program, called "tru 2 u," is targeted to African-American youth, ages 11-14, and their parents in the Cleveland neighborhoods of Central, South Collinwood, Glenville and East Cleveland. Project managers hope to serve more than 300 families.

"I am pleased to have been able to assist in securing these funds for this very vital program," said Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones. "It is vitally important to develop effective strategies to help these youth lower their risks and strengthen the prevention capacity of the communities they live in."

The goals of the program are to:

* Train community agencies to provide prevention programming to families with youth ages 11 to 14
* Support African-American families' abilities to prevent risky behavior in their children
* Reduce the incidence of substance abuse and HIV in African-American youth
* Evaluate the pro gram's effectiveness
* Enhance the comm unity's capacity to continue prevention efforts.

"The teen years are a time of increased energy and experimentation," said Antonnette V. Graham, Ph.D., a professor at Case/UHC Department of Family Medicine and the project director. "Adding the arts to the prevention program offers some unique features not available in regular prevention activities."

The collaborators believe that adding art to the prevention curriculum will:· Increase the interaction among program participants

* Grant a deeper meaning to the program
* Offer dramatic relief
* Provide a safe environment for teens to develop skills to deal with the social pressures to engage in risky behaviors
* Provide a positive role model (the artist) with whom the teen can bond
* Offer an interactive process and opportunities to bond with teens who are also learning ways to resist risky behaviors.

The first component of the program includes prevention curriculum sessions for youth, separate sessions for their parents and a final session for youth and parents together. The second component provides time for the youth to socialize and receive reinforcement of their learning. Parents will meet in support groups to encourage each other. During the second phase, half of the families will participate in a program enriched by the arts, facilitated by professional artists.

Families interested in participating in tru 2 u should call the YWCA at (216) 881-6878.

About Case Western Reserve University

Case is among the nation's leading research institutions. Founded in 1826 and shaped by the unique merger of the Case Institute of Technology and Western Reserve University, Case is distinguished by its strengths in education, research, and service. Located in Cleveland, Case offers nationally recognized programs in the Arts and Sciences, Dentistry, Engineering, Law, Management, Medicine, Nursing, and Social Sciences. http://www.case.edu.

 

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