Strategies — Prevention Alliance of Tennessee
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 STRATEGIC PREVENTION FRAMEWORK

 
 
 
 
 

Individual Strategies

 

Environmental Strategies

 

The STRATEGIC PREVENTION FRAMEWORK

 Individual and environmental intervention strategies are two primary approaches to preventing substance use disorders.

Some prevention interventions are designed to help individuals develop the intentions and skills to act in a healthy manner. Others focus on creating environments that support healthy behavior. Research indicates that the most effective prevention interventions incorporate both approaches. Targeted prevention identifies and reaches out to populations that are at a higher risk for substance misuse.

Any prevention approach should be used with the Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF). Learn more about applying the SPF.

The prevention workforce must also have the cultural competence to effectively engage with the individuals or communities they are targeting. Learn more about cultural competence and the SPF.

Sustainability is another important component of prevention efforts, and the focus of any such effort should be on sustaining positive outcomes, not sustaining any particular program. Learn more about sustainability.

Graphic Sourced from SAHMSA: A Guide to SAMHSA’S Strategic Prevention Framework 2019

 
 

 Strategies for Community Change

  1. Providing Information – education, presentations, printed media and media campaigns (media campaign promoting Tennessee’s Social Host Liability Law, promotion of drug disposal locations)

  2. Building Skills – workshops and training classes (responsible alcohol sales classes, drug-free workplace trainings, parent classes)

  3. Providing Support – providing positive alternative activities, mentoring, referrals, support groups and clubs (Youth Ambassadors, tips for parents and teens, age verification materials for businesses)

  4. Enhancing Access/Reducing Barriers – increasing opportunities to utilize systems and services (providing treatment referrals, medication disposal events)

  5. Changing Consequences – increasing the likelihood of good behavior and decreasing the likelihood of bad behavior (fine structure for businesses that sell alcohol to minors, reward responsible businesses)

  6. Physical Design – modifying the physical design of the environment (park signage, permanent medication disposal bins at police departments and pharmacies)

  7. Modifying/Changing Policy – formal changes in laws or rules and encouraging enforcement of existing regulations (mandatory training for clerks who sell alcohol, mandatory I.D. checks for those purchasing alcohol)