SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 17
Descargar para leer sin conexión
A R T I C L E


           COMMUNITY-BASED
           PREVENTION USING SIMPLE,
           LOW-COST, EVIDENCE-BASED
           KERNELS AND BEHAVIOR
           VACCINES
           Dennis D. Embry
           PAXIS Institute

           A paradox exists in community prevention of violence and drugs. Good
           research now exists on evidence-based programs, yet extensive expenditures
           on prevention have not produced community-level results. Various
           multiproblems are quite prevalent in the United States, such as violence,
           Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), conduct problems,
           learning disabilities, depression, and other mood problems. Various studies
           have observed that intuitively appealing community-based coalitions and
           best practice requirements have not produced prevention gains as hoped
           for by many. Calls for more money, fidelity, or dose seem unlikely to
           succeed. Other alternatives may be possible. Most of the best practices
           aimed at preventing these community problems are composed of
           evidence-based kernels, which act on core principles of prevention (risk
           and protective factors). What is not widely known is that the
           evidence-based kernels are powerful in their own right. Evidence-based
           kernels are irreducible units of behavior-change technology, and they can
           be put together into behavioral vaccines (daily practices) with powerful
           longitudinal prevention results. Kernels and behavioral vaccines are
           simple, and they are not programs or curriculum in the conventional
           sense. This article presents examples of evidence-based kernels and
           behavioral vaccines that can be promoted easily across whole communities
           or states using social marketing principles. Widespread propagation of
           evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines could have a significant
           impact on communities and their prevention norms, providing low-cost
           alternatives and practical models for community psychology, public health,
           and policy makers. Behavioral kernels and vaccines can add needed
           precision to prevention science and community psychology. © 2004 Wiley
           Periodicals, Inc.

  Correspondence to: Dennis D. Embry, Ph.D., PAXIS Institute, P.O. Box 68494, Tucson, AZ 85737. E-mail:
  dde@paxis.org


  JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY, Vol. 32, No. 5, 575–591 (2004)                              © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
  Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI: 10.1002/jcop.20020
576   •   Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004


Persistent efforts to apply weak or inefficient prevention programs in the United
States result in annual expenditures of about 800 million dollars for safe and drug-
free schools. However, these expenditures have produced little or no appreciable
effect on either substance abuse or violence prevention based on previous national
evaluations ~e.g., Silva & Thorne, 1997!. These negative findings led to a demand for
compliance with principles of effectiveness: mandating needs assessments and adop-
tion of evidence-based practices based on those needs. In their analysis of compli-
ance, Hallfors and Godette ~2002! reported that few schools truly follow those principles
of effectiveness. Furthermore, it is not clear from their analysis that such compliance
can produce community-level changes in violence or substance abuse. They found
many districts ~from a sample of 104 school districts in 12 states! appear to select
research-based curricula, but the quality of implementation is low. Only 19% of the
responding district coordinators indicated that schools were implementing a research-
based curriculum with fidelity. Common problems included lack of teacher training,
lack of requisite materials, partial use of required lessons and teaching strategies,
and failure to deliver lessons to age-appropriate student groups. Hallfors and Godette
concluded that low levels of funding, inadequate infrastructure, decentralized decision-
making, and lack of program guidance have contributed to the slow progress in
improving school-based prevention. All of these problems are becoming worse because
of local and state cutbacks from economic crises in state and local governments.
More money and resources to fix these issues simply will not happen for some time—
especially with prevailing ethos on academic accountability. Finally, schools and the
whole context of prevention have changed dramatically, with such things as No
Child Left Behind, proclaim the federal leadership of safe and drug-free schools
~Modzeleski, 2003!.
     Other evidence challenges current political dogma of community-based approaches:
a Cochrane Review of community programs aimed at adult use of tobacco and a study
of the Fighting Back Initiatives.
     Secker-Walker, Gnich, Platt, and Lancaster ~2002! reported frustrating disappoint-
ment about community-based programs to reduce tobacco use among adults. After
reviewing 32 studies, they reported that the largest and best-conducted studies to
detect an effect on prevalence of smoking were a disappointing failure.
     Federal and foundation initiatives continue to provide strong support for com-
munity anti-drug, delinquency, and violence coalitions. The Fighting Back initiative
from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation provides an excellent venue to test the
full measure of a coordinated community approach, which was done in a report by
Hallfors, Hyunsan, Livert, and Kadushin ~2002!. All stakeholders ~political, business,
and community leaders! were invited to address substance-abuse issues and develop a
comprehensive, coordinated response. The communities developed their own ideas
for effective practice. The model of community-driven selection differs from efforts
like the Minnesota Heart Health effort, which is fairly prescriptive across multiple
communities to implement core and common practices. The Fighting Back initiative—
the Cadillac of community-coalition model efforts—included public awareness, pre-
vention, early intervention, relapse prevention, and some environmental strategies. As
Hallfors and her colleagues noted, the Fighting Back study tested the community-
empowerment model, not specific interventions.
     The Fighting Back evaluation sounds alarm bells for current, common community-
empowerment approaches, and readers of this article are urged to read the full study.
The research found:
Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines   •    577

    1. no effect of strategies on child and youth outcomes,
    2. a significant negative effect on adult substance-abuse outcomes, and
    3. no effect of community strategies on outcomes.

     Perversely, the more high-dose strategies the communities did, the worse the
substance abuse outcomes—that is, substance abuse increased. These findings soundly
refuted the community-empowerment model.
     An exception to the litany of failure in community approaches is Project Freedom,
a broad-based community effort to reduce alcohol and drug use in Wichita, Kansas. A
unique partnership between the program and the evaluation ultimately helped develop
something called the “Kansas Community Toolbox”—a data dashboard of community
actions accessible online ~e.g., Fawcett et al., 1997; Paine-Andrews et al., 1996!. One of
the first outcome efforts of Project Freedom was reported in 1996 by Lewis and others;
it involved an adaptation of a previously validated procedure called “reward and
reminder” by Biglan and others in 1995, which showed major reductions in illegal
sales of tobacco to minors from about 50% to 20% of the attempts.
     In Wichita, Project Freedom members—consisting of adults and minors—issued
citations to clerks in supermarkets, convenience stores, and liquor stores who were
willing to sell alcohol and tobacco products to minors and issued commendations to
clerks who refused to sell. For those liquor stores receiving the citizen’s surveillance,
there was a marked decrease from 83% of stores selling alcohol to minors to 33%. In
liquor stores not experiencing the intervention, there was a smaller decrease in alco-
hol sales, from 45% to 36%.
     In Wyoming and Wisconsin, my colleagues and I have implemented the same
basic reward and reminder ~citation and commendation! protocols using coalitions.
The effort contains extensive documentation of exactly what to do and how to do it,
along with technical assistance support provided by the state and nested inside a social
marketing campaign. In both cases, the results have been quite powerful ~Table 1!.
Both states are home rule, meaning no state enforcement of tobacco access laws. Both
states have high rates of smoking among adults and adolescents. Wyoming results have
been stable for three years, and the Wisconsin implementation had only two months
of planning, coalition contracting, and training before the official tobacco inspections
were conducted by a third party. Wisconsin’s population is ten times greater than
Wyoming.
     The implementation of the Reward and Reminder protocol has been consistently
effective in eight communities of Oregon ~Biglan et al., 1995!, in Wichita ~Lewis et al.,
1996!, and in the whole states of Wyoming, as well as Wisconsin ~using officially
reported state Synar inspection rates as required by law!. These iterations of community-


Table 1. Official Percentage of Successful Illegal Sales of Tobacco to Minors

                 1996          1997          1998         1999          2000          2001            2002

Wyoming          43%          28.2%         44.3%         55.1%          8.9%          9.4%            8.65
Wisconsin        46.8%        22.6%         27.8%         22.4%         24.6%         33.7%           20.4%


     Baseline
     Reward and Reminder
578   •   Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004


based efforts are different from traditional efforts. First, the basic intervention is
simple, and community members can be trained to implement reward and reminder
in a few hours. This creates “team spirit” and mutual reinforcement. Second, the
results it produces are larger and faster than traditional policies and procedures.
Thus, feedback happens quickly and the successes are fed to the media and commu-
nity, creating a perceived norm. Third, the effects derive from concentrated imple-
mentation of a simple evidence-based strategy with focused intensity. Then a community
“tipping point” can happen. People are not flailing about on scores of different
things. In many ways, these are the core principles that have been used successfully for
years—from barn raising to fund raising for United Way. The example is useful as a
metaphor of what might be done with kernels of evidence-based practices for preven-
tion and will be explained later.
    The unfortunate failure of the “empowerment model” or the mandated menu
selection of best practices versus a more-defined or constrained community replica-
tion model has many implications for prevention. A fundamentally different approach
reflecting the simplicity of the reward and reminder programs may be needed for
communities if such issues as violence or substance abuse are to be prevented.


EVIDENCE-BASED KERNELS AND BEHAVIORAL
VACCINES FOR PREVENTION
Lists of presumptive best practices, published by the U.S. Department of Education,
the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration, the Centers for Disease Con-
trol and Prevention, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Prevention, Drug Strategies,
and others, typically contain considerable overlap. The publication of these lists has
created confusion about the trade name ~trademark! with the active ingredients of
proven interventions. Many people falsely assume that the program is the active ingre-
dient. For example, the Reward and Reminder ~Citation and Commendation! cam-
paign for tobacco-access control described herein is not the active ingredient; it is a
marketing name for something that contains a list of active ingredients supported by
significant research.


Searching for Active Ingredients in Prevention:
Evidence-Based Kernels
In pharmacy, an active ingredient is a chemical that produces some reliable effect.
This article proposes a similar idea, but suggests a novel phrase, evidence-based behav-
ioral kernels. What precisely is a kernel? In behavioral science, an evidence-based
behavioral kernel is an irreducible unit of behavior-change technology that produces
an observable, reliable result ~cause and effect, if you will!. Kernels can work individ-
ually and can be combined ~compounded, in pharmacy! in ways to produce positive
results. By coming to understand the active ingredients—evidence-based behavioral
kernels—in prevention programs, one can begin to create a community-based culture
of effective practices that might be more sustainable, especially when state and local
government resources are stretched to the limit.
     How did the idea for behavioral kernels emerge? A number of leading preven-
tion scientists was invited to meet at Stanford University to produce a consensus
statement about prevention of child-rearing problems, particularly for children with
serious multiproblems. Both Dr. Richard “Rico” Catalano and I were in attendance
Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines   •   579

and have created evidence-based “best practices” for prevention. We fell into a dia-
logue about what was really “inside the box” of those best practices, which then
revealed what might be described as behavioral kernels. Both of us first taught a
universal, school-wide signal for quiet and transition. Both of us taught the teachers
and staff to engage in frequent ritualized greetings on a daily basis with the stu-
dents, such as shaking their hands as they enter or leave classes. In both cases, teach-
ers, students, and peers are taught to praise and reinforce positive behaviors. Thus,
Dr. Catalano’s work ~Seattle Social Development Project or SSDP, as it was originally
called and now called SOAR! and my own earlier PeaceBuilders work ~Embry et al.,
1996! actually used very similar protocols, packaged somewhat differently. Both pro-
duce measurably positive benefits in well-controlled studies ~Flannery et al., 2003;
O’Donnell, et al., 1995!.
     This coincidence was not singular: During another special meeting involving lead-
ing scientists of violence prevention, Dr. Denise Gottfredson and I had a chance to
review our respective work. While Dr. Gottfredson called her approach “an organiza-
tional development model” ~Gottfredson, 1986; Gottfredson, Gottfredson, & Hybl,
1993! and I called mine “a social–emotional–cognitive competence” model ~e.g., Embry
et al., 1996!, both of us used nearly identical reinforcement procedures of student
behavior ~e.g., having recognitions read on the public address system!, which are
embedded in a number of other evidence-based prevention programs such as Positive
Behavior Support ~e.g., Sugai et al., 2000! and Constructive Discipline ~Mayer, Butter-
worth, Nafpaktitis, & Sulzer-Azaroff, 1983!. The connections among the evidence-
based prevention programs become even more apparent, tracing the intellectual and
scientific roots via bibliographies. For example, all of the above-named major pro-
grams cited the earlier work on the use of school-wide behavioral reinforcement
protocols ~e.g., Mayer, & Butterworth, 1979!. Mayer, in turn, made use of other pio-
neering work from behavior analysis in time-series studies of single classrooms or
teachers ~e.g., Jones, Fremouw, & Carples, 1977; Madsen, Becker, & Thomas, 1968!. In
a word, best practice programs are composed of evidence-based kernels that work on
their own and can be formulated into combinations.
     Like life, which is encoded by genes to make proteins or structures, behavioral
kernels are encoded by elemental behavioral equivalents of genes, discovered behav-
ioral laws. A few examples include Matching Law, Extinction, Discriminative Stimuli,
Variable Interval, Ratio Schedules, and many others that are derived from the basic
research of psychology, sociology, anthropology, and even medical findings related to
mood, traits, or behavior. These elemental units or laws, though, are not “alive” unless
expressed as a behavioral kernel. The elemental units that create behavioral kernels
are typically difficult to see under the naked eye, just like the genes or DNA, but are
readily discernible in laboratory settings.
     Generally, almost anyone can use a behavioral kernel with very brief explanation
or modeling, such as shaking hands, using a transition cues or writing a praise note—
even without understanding the elemental units or “laws” making up the kernel.
Interestingly, real people rather than scientists have invented most behavioral kernels,
which then have been spread by imitation and verbal behavior through the principle
of selection by consequences. Formal scientists, however, have studied many behav-
ioral kernels quite extensively and improved them using theoretical knowledge of the
underlying behavioral elements. Behavioral kernels ultimately have their roots in real
people acting on the world—as everyday scientists who are acting on their social
universe. Humans, unlike other primates, invent, adapt, and select many behavioral
580    •   Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004


kernels to construct their social environment. Kernels can become a bit like verbal
memes, self-replicating by imitation

Criteria for Potential Behavioral Vaccines and Kernels for
Changing Cultural Practices
Kernels can be assembled to create behavioral vaccines, which are substantially differ-
ent from prevention programs. A program is typically a curriculum or lessons that uses
syllabi over days or weeks. Typically, the assumption is that after the completion of the
program sequence, some change in behavior or knowledge happens. Thus, programs
like Second Step or DARE have a curriculum plan and are completed over several weeks
or months. But what is a behavioral vaccine?
     In a previous study ~Embry, 2002!, I detailed the characteristics of a behavioral
vaccine:
      a! any intervention that inoculates recipients against morbidity or mortality, in
         this case, problematic, aggressive, or potentially dangerous or lethal behavior,
         hospitalization, incarceration, suicide, or murder;
      b! low cost, as exemplified by hand washing to prevent infections, diet and exer-
         cise to prevent high blood pressure and diabetes;
      c! ease of administration that would insure minimum costs and maximum ben-
         efits with daily routines, assuring every-day practice with a minimum of train-
         ing; and
      d! mass administration.

Behavioral vaccines make it possible to directly reach as many people as is humanly
possible with a minimum of costs, with no need for trained, technical, or professional
personnel present.
    Behavioral vaccines are not the same as conventional “universal” prevention pro-
grams, as is commonly articulated by federal or state agencies. The difference in logic
has important public health, safety, or economic consequences. Behavioral vaccines
aim at total population-level changes in mortality and morbidity. A typical prevention
program aims at increasing protective factors or decreasing risk factors for a group ~all
children say at a particular school, which may be called “universal,” but is not all
children in the total community, state, or nation! or aims at a smaller subset of people
in a school or social unit ~targeted or selected approach in current jargon!. Most
prevention programs, even if well grounded in exemplary research, do not meet the
definitions of behavioral vaccines—generally because of cost, complexity, and0or poor
potential for comprehensive reach. A behavioral vaccine is, above all else, simple. In
everyday language, most people call a behavioral vaccine a cultural practice.
    Prevention programs have grave difficulties becoming cultural practices. Even the
most research-based prevention programs, like Botvin’s LifeSkills, have not become
cultural practices. Why is this so? One significant reason is that programs “swim
against the current” of selections by consequences and related adaptive principles.
Most cultural practices are adopted because of an interlocking series of self-sustaining
consequences and antecedent conditions.
    A cultural practice is almost immediately discernable and can be imitated quickly,
even if not perfectly. Furthermore, the cultural practice typically produces immediate
results—typically positive reinforcement from others, escape from social approbation,
Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines   •   581

and0or some other kind of advantage. For example, using good manners—a cultural
practice that social scientists might call “social skills”—typically evokes many layers of
reinforcement or advantage in many settings. Alternatively, being a really skilled “bad
boy” in a rough-and-tumble chaotic neighborhood likewise produces many layers of
immediate reinforcement or advantage. Both of these examples are cultural practices
with different topographies selected by the consequences in their settings. Expecting
any “prevention programs” to become a cultural practice is doomed for some obvious
yet very profound reasons:

    1. Most prevention programs fail to produce immediately discernable advantage,
       benefit, or results, and, therefore, immediate intrinsic or extrinsic reinforce-
       ment will be very weak. Without such feedback, behavior will soon decay. Other
       behaviors that do get more immediate feedback or reinforcement will be selected
       for in the environment, weakening the prevention program efforts.
    2. Proprietary issues ~e.g., trademarks, copyrights, understandable business con-
       cerns! can work against a widespread diffusion of a cultural practice ~although
       can expand diffusion, too!. Effective prevention programs take a great deal of
       capital to develop, test, and diffuse. If people could spontaneously adopt the
       prevention program and use it, then the results would be catastrophic for most
       developers. Thus, under current consequences of prevention funding, extreme
       disincentives exist for disclosing evidence-based kernels inside “best practice”
       programs. These behaviors are not bad; they are rational in an economic sense.
    3. Basic social marketing issues also impinge on issues of prevention programs
       versus cultural practices. Social marketing uses what are called the 4 Ps, which
       are: the conception of a Product, Price, distribution ~Place!, and Promotion.
       The price of prevention best practice products presently is too high for schools—
       typically between $10,000 to $50,000 per year, which means the buyer can only
       be at a school-wide or district level—never “purchased” by a teacher or indi-
       vidual staff member. The place of distribution of best practices is not conve-
       nient. One can only obtain best practices from specialty suppliers, which requires
       bids or other complicated processes. One cannot buy effective prevention at
       convenient retail outlets. Promotion of evidence-based prevention products
       that can be adopted easily is virtually nonexistent. When was the last time the
       reader saw or heard a slick TV, radio, or newsprint ad for a prevention program
       in local media?

     For potential behavioral vaccines or behavioral kernels to become cultural prac-
tices that might help prevent serious social problems, such behavioral vaccines or
behavioral kernels would have to meet some rather stringent criteria. They would have
to be:

    1. low or no cost,
    2. produce immediate benefit,
    3. easy to explain, imitate, and generalize,
    4. meet or solve other competing demands,
    5. easily socially marketed, and
    6. change key prevention principles—behavior- and0or antecedent-related risk
       and protective factors ~e.g., Hawkins, Catalano, & Miller, 1992!.
582   •   Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004


    Is it possible that the six criteria for behavioral vaccines and behavioral kernels
can be met for powerful prevention? Yes. In some cases, strong or better evidence
exists for some behavioral vaccines or behavioral kernels than “best practice” pro-
grams on various government department lists. Often, many candidate behavioral
vaccines or behavioral kernels actually are embedded as active ingredients in named
prevention programs.


Behavioral Kernels or Vaccines for Classrooms and Families

From the 1960s to the present, substantial research has been conducted on effective
teaching and schools. Investigators have used a variety of research methods to capture
differences in effective classrooms and schools—from direct observation, to archival
records, to surveys. Some studies have been cross-sectional, some have been longitu-
dinal, and some have been true experiments. Examples of some of those studies were
cited earlier ~e.g., Abbott, O’Donnell, Hawkins, Hill, Kosterman, & Catalano, 1998;
Embry et al., 1996; Flannery et al., 2003; Gottfredson, 1986; Mayer et al., 1983!. What
is extraordinary is that many of these efforts contain similar components, which may
have different names for the same thing ~e.g., fuzzy grams versus praise notes; quiet
signal versus the peace sign!. In general, these procedures increase the density of
positive reinforcement from peers and adults, reduce negative attention, change the
environment to reduce negative behaviors, etc. Is there an experimental literature of
the active ingredients? Yes, although it is not well known outside program developers
or not understood as evidence based by consumers. What also is useful to know is that
many of those same active ingredients exist in effective parenting programs. A number
of potential evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines are presented in the
Tables 2 and 3 that have usefulness for classrooms and0or homes, as well as commu-
nity contexts such as after-school programs and day-care centers.


Evidence-Based Behavioral Kernels or Vaccines
for Community Settings

Negative or positive parent–child behavior related to prediction of life-time adverse
child-development outcomes can be observed easily and countered easily in public
places such as restaurants, grocery stores, waiting rooms, etc. ~Langer, Rieckhof, Stein-
bach, & Tausch, 1973! or outside while monitoring and managing children’s play ~e.g.,
Embry & Malfetti, 1980!. Harsh handling, scolding, or hitting of infants and toddlers
who are fearful can be commonly observed and coded by observers in shopping
centers, malls, grocery stores, and other public places ~e.g., Honig, 1994!. The prob-
ability of when and where parents and children will have difficulties during shopping
trips in types of interactions that predict life problems can be observed and predicted
~e.g., Sanders, & Hunter, 1984!. Parent–teen and teen–peer interactions can be coded
reliably in stores and shopping malls and show differences by the children’s ages
~Montemayor & Flannery, 1989!.
     Many of the evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines for school and home
can be used in community settings. For example, response cost and class-wide peer
tutoring can be applied to after-school programs. The Good Behavior Game can be
used for various team sports or after-school activities, and Beat the Timer can be used
in virtually every community group activity for children.
Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines    •   583

Table 2. Example Evidence-Based Behavior Kernels

Kernel Title                                   Description                    Evidence Citation Examples

Beat the timer ~k!             Use small timers to reduce allocated time    Adams & Drabman, 1995
                               for task. Powerful effects for reducing      Drabman & Creedon, 1979
                               negative behaviors. Available at most        Wolfe, Kelly, & Drabman, 1981
                               discount stores.
Response cost ~k!              Removal of token, money, or privilege        Forman, 1980
                               for misbehavior w0o emotional displays.      Kendall & Finch, 1976
                               Works as well as stimulant medication        Little & Kelley, 1989
                               for children with Attention Deficit          Reynolds & Kelley, 1997
                               Hyperactivity Disorder. Easily adapted
                               at home.
Mystery motivators ~k!         Random rewards using a simple,               Brown & Redmon, 1989
                               lottery-like system for behaviors. Very      Foxx & Schaeffer, 1981
                               powerful in changing child behaviors         Moore et al., 1994
                               at home & school, parent behavior,
                               and work-related behaviors.
Nonverbal transition           Nonverbal ~visual, kinesthetic, and          Abbott et al., 1998
cues ~k!                       auditory! cues for transitions ~stopping     Embry et al., 1996
                               one task & starting another!, changing       Krantz & Risley, 1977
                               voice registers, getting quiet to hear       Rosenkoetter & Fowler, 1986
                               instruction that are used school wide.
Meaningful roles ~ jobs! ~k!   Providing responsible roles to all           Kahne & Bailey, 1999
                               children in the classroom, school, or        Rutter, 1983
                               home increases prosocial behaviors,
                               instructional time, and achievement,
                               and provides positive adult and peer
                               reinforcement & recognition.
Response cards0slates ~k!      True or false, multiple choice, open         Armendariz & Umbreit, 1999
                               response, etc. cards0slates substantially    Gardner, Howard, & Grossi,
                               improve participation, reduce                1994
                               disruptions, raise weekly tests scores,      Skinner, Fletcher, &
                               improve standardized achievement and         Henington, 1996
                               allow for more feedback, praise, and
                               recognition. Can be used at home.
“Tootle”0compliment0           Tootles ~opposite of tattles! are written    Abbott et al., 1998
praise note ~k!                compliment notes that are publicly           Embry et al., 1996
                               posted. Effective in improving social        Gottfredson, 1986
                               competence, school adjustment, and           Skinner et al., 2002
                               reducing problem behaviors.
Positive school-to-home        Positive notes from school staff to home     Blechman, Taylor, & Schrader,
notes ~k!                      and from home to school help bridge          1981
                               behavior and contingencies, unite adults,    Kelley & McCain, 1995
                               foster positive family attention to child,
                               and reduce negative0harsh interactions.




    Some procedures are unique to community settings. Recall that parent–child
behavior typically degrades in restaurants. Traditional place mats for family restau-
rants typically feature a sampling of games ~e.g., riddles, matching tasks, tic-tac-toe!,
while table-talk place mats provide conversational topics and illustrated games in
584    •    Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004


Table 3. Example Evidence-Based Behavioral Vaccines

Vaccine Title                                   Description                     Evidence Citation Examples

Structured0Organized           Structured recess games that emphasize           Jarrett et al., 1998
recess ~v!                     turn taking, helpfulness, rule following,        Lewis, Powers, Kelk, &
                               and emotion control dramatically improve         Newcomer, 2002
                               cooperative behavior, decrease bullying &        Murphy, Hutchison, & Bailey,
                               aggression, improve social norms, better         1984
                               character, improve academic learning             Pellegrini & Davis, 1993
                               during the day, and reduces Attention
                               Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and other
                               disturbances. Reduces obesity or BMI.
Good behavior game ~v!         A team-based, response-cost protocol for         Embry, 2002
                               groups of children that rewards inhibition
                               of inattentive, disruptive, and
                               aggressive0bullying. Documented in
                               approximately 30 studies to reduce
                               short-term and long-term behavior
                               problems as well as DSM-IV Attention
                               Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, and
                               conduct problems, special-education
                               placement plus substance abuse0initiation.
                               Can be implemented from simple
                               presentations or manuals.
Class wide peer tutoring ~v!   A team-based classroom procedure                 Greenwood, 1991
                               involving rapid-paced learning for               Greenwood et al., 1993
                               spelling0vocabulary, math, & reading that
                               improves behavior, increases standardized
                               achievement, and reduces
                               special-education placement. CWPT uses
                               all of the kernels listed in this chart. Class
                               is split into teams. Teams are split into
                               pairs who work together 3– 4 times a week
                               on rapid-fire practice. Points are
                               calculated, announced, and posted,
                               followed by some recognition and
                               occasional team reward. CWPT can be
                               implemented from simple presentations or
                               manuals, producing observable gains in a
                               week.
Special play ~v!               Utilizes 15 minutes of special play with         McDonald & Sayger, 1998
                               simple things ~blocks, buttons, pipe             Webster-Straaton, 1998
                               cleaners, blocks, scraps, junk! by the child
                               in which an adult follows the lead of the
                               child. Improves warmth and compliance
                               while reducing aggression and agitation.




which the entire family can participate. In controlled studies ~e.g., Green, Hardison, &
Greene, 1984!, table-talk place mats resulted in more social and educational dialog
among family members than either traditional place mat or no-material conditions.
Table-talk place mats also reduced parental coercive comments and children’s distrac-
tion comments. Table-talk place mats could be printed in bulk and changed each
Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines   •   585

week or month as a community-based kernel intervention. Behavior change could
even be measured.
     Grocery stores are places where parent–child behavior deteriorates. It turns out
that simple advice packages, distributed to parents, observably changed parent–child
interactions for the better while shopping ~e.g., Clark, Greene, Macrae, McNees, Davis,
& Risley, 1977; Ergon-Rowe, Ichinose, & Clark, 1991!. In studies of preschoolers, my
co-workers and I have been able to change parent–hild behavior while shopping using
specially designed shopping bags, distributed in the store, that have sticker charts for
the child. Based on marketing research ~e.g., Rust, 1993!, positive behaviors can be
cued by signs in the aisles or on the floors of the store. Community distribution of
evidence-based practices on child rearing could happen in the places where problem-
atic behavior occurs, such as grocery stores, video rental stores, toy stores, discount
stores, and shopping malls. Parenting behavior can be improved in those settings
using kernels of evidence-based practices.
     With the exception of safety research and environmental issues ~e.g., DePasquale
& Geller, 1999; Geller, 1973!, there is very little extant research on the diffusion of
behavioral vaccines and evidence-based kernels. This lack is probably driven by the
metaphor of therapy and school that has driven much of prevention science, each of
which have an implicit culture that demands lessons or sessions. Kernels and behav-
ioral vaccines are fundamentally daily habits or routines, not curriculum or therapy
models, and thereby have tended to be ignored or overlooked. Behavioral vaccines
and kernels also can be metaphorically like a product, which marketed as easily as
something in a grocery store, discount store, via mail-order, or instead through in-service
training or a continuing-education model.

SOCIAL MARKETING OF BEHAVIORAL KERNELS
AND VACCINES
Evidence-based behavioral kernels and vaccines lend themselves to powerful models
of social marketing in ways that traditional approaches to prevention, intervention,
and treatment cannot be. For example, “Tootle notes” or “Beat the Timer” can be
positively and quite easily promoted in a community:

     • “Does someone you know feel under appreciated? Pick up a package of ‘Tootle
       Notes’ today at any participating grocery store.”
     • “Do you know a child who dawdles, delays, and gets distracted? Pick up a ‘Beat the
       Timer’ kit at the child’s school, most pediatricians offices, or local drug stores.”
   Social Marketing makes use of the “Five Ps of Marketing.” The modern approach
to marketing revolves around five Ps: product, performance, price, place, and
promotion.1

     Product: Commercial marketers make sure that their product is appealing to con-
          sumers and has a catchy name that is easy to remember. “Tootle Notes” or
          “Beat the Timer” are examples of catchy names.
     Performance: Commercial marketers make clear what the customer must do to
          achieve the advertised result and what the benefits are from the product.

1
  Traditional papers on social marketing list only four, and this paper adds another based on prior experi-
ence in the field.
586    •    Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004


           “Awareness” is not performance, which must be measurable and reportable.
           Kernels and vaccines make performance promises of benefit such as “learn
           more,” “have less stress,” “saves time,” or “feel better.” The actions to achieve
           performance can be quite simple in the case of kernels or vaccines, such as
           “use response slates 20 minutes per day” or “use class-wide peer tutoring for
           20–25 minutes per day, 3 or 4 times per week.”
      Place: Kernels and behavioral vaccines can be easily accessible to virtually all poten-
           tial consumers, unlike most prevention programs that are only available through
           specialty catalogues, training, certification, etc. All you have to do to get
           “Tootle Notes” or “Beat the Timer” and other kernels or behavioral vaccines
           is visit a local school, merchant, ask your doctor, or perhaps call a toll-free
           number.
      Price: Indicated or selected prevention programs or treatment protocols may cost
           thousands of dollars to start up or use. Some evidence-based kernels, how-
           ever, can be given away as sponsored premiums, such as “Tootle Notes spon-
           sored by XYZ Realty.” Others cost a few dollars at most. Behavioral vaccines
           may be somewhat more expensive, perhaps a $50 to $500 for a group of
           children. Price also can be in time or effort, such as “takes only a few min-
           utes a day.”
      Promotion: Commercial marketers use promotion and advertising to familiarize
           consumers with the product and persuade them to buy it or try it. This
           enables the full power of advertising and marketing to operate for community-
           based prevention. The current crop of widely listed best practices do not lend
           themselves to this type of promotion, largely because the “buyers” are highly
           institutionalized—school districts, state government, etc. Evidence-based pre-
           vention kernels or behavioral vaccines can be adopted or purchased by a
           single user—a child, a teacher, a parent, etc. Kernels and vaccines can be sold
           in normal commercial settings like grocery stores and discount stores. Unfor-
           tunately, one cannot even order an evidence-based prevention program ~“every-
           thing you need, just add water”! from Amazon.com.

     There are some other issues to consider about the social marketing of evidence-
based kernels and behavioral vaccines that may not be transparent. First, they invite
huge possibilities for sponsorships from the private sector using marketing and adver-
tising revenue rather than charitable gift giving. From my own personal experience in
this country and overseas, I have been able to recruit major sponsorships from multi-
national corporations to do this kind of focused, positive, and population-based pre-
vention. Second, the entire nature of evidence-based kernels and vaccines invites
partnerships. Many people can play at the same thing, which moves prevention much
closer to a culture and norms change. Third, the impact of evidence-based kernels
and behavioral vaccines are observable and measurable using very simple procedures.
Most of the kernels and behavioral vaccines come from a robust history of applied
behavior analysis that insisted upon very high standards of measurement. In the case
of kernels like response slates, nonverbal cues, cooperative games during recess, or
behavioral vaccines like the Good Behavior Game or Class-wide Peer Tutoring, the
impact on behavior is evident and measurable immediately, or within days. These
observable effects greatly help in community self-efficacy and coalition building. Fourth,
kernels and vaccines can be used as real examples for “cause marketing” for complicated
Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines   •   587

concepts like early childhood education, educational reform, or community violence
prevention.
     Social norms commonly are described as determining much of multiproblem
behavior in youth. Norms are about daily behaviors, routines, and rituals rather than
attitudes. When confronted with prevention in the past, most “social marketing” efforts
have focused on the general issue or the “don’t” behaviors ~e.g., don’t do domestic
violence or child abuse!. Offering a menu of 30 prevention programs for schools or
stakeholders to choose from, like the prevention fair, cannot alter the community
norms because there are no common daily behaviors, routines, rituals, or language
that share any stimulus properties that would cue rule-governed behaviors that make
up the core of “community norms.” Community norms require some kind of identity
or unifying concept. Good social marketing campaigns promote a product or products
and a brand identity because the brand identity “leads” people to other products
based on the performance and benefits from the first success. In the case of evidence-
based behavioral kernels and vaccines, my colleagues and I have started using the
phrase, “The Simple Gifts Initiative” or “Simple Gifts for Our Children” because the
benefits and ease of use need to be conveyed as distinct from standard prevention
programs or campaigns. The use of evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines
with a brand identity used in social marketing can create a shift in community norm—in
actual behavior.


LIMITATIONS OF THIS STUDY AND CONCEPT
Increasingly, various entities such as the National Institute of Health and the Society
for Prevention Research have called for some alternative to evidence-based programs,
suggesting, perhaps, the use of principles of effective prevention. Schools and com-
munity groups have voiced some dissatisfaction for the “canned program” approach.
Evidence-based behavioral kernels and vaccines that measurably effect risk and pro-
tective factors add greater precision to issues of adoption, dose, and fidelity than very
broad principles such as “refusal skills” or “interactive instruction.” The behavioral
kernels and vaccines described herein are quite discrete. They can be precisely oper-
ationalized, which is part of their charm. Their short-term effects are easily measured,
and their long-term effects have been established.
     Notwithstanding these advantages, this article does not address other issues required
for full-fledged community- or state-level approach—mostly for reasons of space and
focus. Remaining issues that must be addressed include, but are not limited to:

    1. how to calculate an optimum mix of behavioral kernels and vaccines for cost-
       effective results;
    2. how to create a data dashboard for monitoring both implementation and
       outcomes;
    3. how to construct evaluation protocols for such strategies; and
    4. how this approach would integrate or augment existing investments in more
       complex evidence-based programs.

    This article does not address an important next step in the overall construct of the
theory of behavioral kernels and vaccines. The theory lends itself to the construction
of a very precise formal language of prevention, just as genetic researchers have a
588   •   Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004


precise language of the polymorphism or alleles of genes. For example, each kernel
can be given a unique classification code ~e.g., BT         beat the timer!; its allele or
variation can be coded such as BTR ~Beat the timer with reward! or BTRC ~Beat the
timer with response cost for failure!. Dose, intensity, frequency, or other factors can be
precisely coded by abbreviation, such as BTRC~2 pd! to indicate two times per day.
This formal language of prevention would allow for far greater precision in under-
standing what works and what does not, as well as for replication. Amusingly, there is
a precise, formal language for tying fishing flies, understood by any serious fly-fisher
who can copy the instruction—yet no formal recipe language for prevention research
or practice.
    For the developers of prevention programs who always have potential economic
interests, the downside would be full disclosure of active ingredients—which is required
anyway in the course of therapeutic medical research. Some organization such as the
Society for Prevention Research could substantially further the science of prevention
by developing a common set of notations for behavioral kernels and vaccines, so that
principle-driven prevention versus trademarked program prevention could be better
developed and studied.


SUMMARY

The use of best practice prevention programs and intuitively appealing community
coalition processes have generally failed, so far, to yield population-level effects despite
the funds allocated and regulations to promote them. This article introduces a ratio-
nal alternative: promotion of evidence-based behavioral kernels and vaccines that
have a chance of becoming cultural practices—with community-level effects on vari-
ous multiproblems like substance abuse, delinquency, violence, or school failure.
Evidence-based kernels are irreducible units of behavior-change technology that pro-
duce an observable, reliable result. Evidence-based kernels are what compose most of
the named best practices for prevention. What is not widely known is that the evidence-
based kernels are powerful in their own right. Behavioral vaccines are essentially
several kernels put together for daily use with powerful longitudinal results. Substan-
tial evidence exists showing that behavioral kernels and vaccines can affect major risk
or protective factors or prevention principles. Because of the simplicity of kernels and
behavioral vaccines, they can be promoted easily across whole communities or states,
producing measurable changes that can be documented via time-series designs, in real
world circumstances. Widespread propagation of evidence-based kernels and behav-
ioral vaccines could have significant impact on communities, providing a low-cost
alternative and practical model for community psychology, public health, and policy
makers. Evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines represent simple gifts for the
future of our children that can change community norms about prevention of serious
problems like substance abuse and violence.


REFERENCES

Abbott, R.D., O’Donnell, J., Hawkins, J.D., Hill, K.G., Kosterman, R., & Catalano, R.F. ~1998!.
   Changing teaching practices to promote achievement and bonding to school. American
   Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 68, 542– 552.
Adams, C.D., & Drabman, R.S. ~1995!. Improving morning interactions: Beat-the-Buzzer with a
   boy having multiple handicaps. Child & Family Behavior Therapy. 17, 13–26.
Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines   •   589

Armendariz, F., & Umbreit, J. ~1999!. Using active responding to reduce disruptive behavior in
     a general education classroom. Journal of Positive Behavior Interventions, 1, 152–158.
Biglan, A., Henderson, J.M., Humphreys, D., Yasui, M., Whisman, R., Black, C., & James, L.
     ~1995!. Mobilizing positive reinforcement to reduce youth access to tobacco. Tobacco Con-
     trol, 4, 42– 48.
Blechman, E.A., Taylor, C.J., & Schrader, S.M. ~1981!. Family problem solving versus home notes
     as early intervention with high-risk children. Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology,
     49, 919–926.
Brown, N., & Redmon, W.K. ~1989!. The effects of a group reinforcement contingency on
     staff use of unscheduled sick leave. Journal of Organizational Behavior Management, 10,
     3–17.
Clark, H.B., Greene, B.F., Macrae, J.W., McNees, M.P., Davis, J.L., & Risley, T.R. ~1977!. A parent
     advice package for family shopping trips: Development and evaluation. Journal of Applied
     Behavior Analysis, 10, 605– 624.
DePasquale, J.P., & Geller, E.S. ~1999!. Critical success factors for behavior-based safety: A study
     of twenty industry-wide applications. Journal of Safety Research, 30, 237–249.
Drabman, R.S., & Creedon, D.L. ~1979!. Beat the buzzer. Child Behavior Therapy, 1, 295–296.
Embry, D.D. ~2002!. The good behavior game: A best practice candidate as a universal behav-
     ioral vaccine. Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review, 5~4!, 273–297.
Embry, D.D., Flannery, D., Vazsonyi, A., Powell, K., & Atha, H. ~1996!. PeaceBuilders: A theo-
     retically driven, school-based model for early violence prevention. American Journal of
     Preventive Medicine, 12, 91–100.
Embry, D.D., & Malfetti, J.M. ~1980!. Reducing the risk of pedestrian accidents to preschoolers
     by parent training and symbolic modeling for children: An experimental analysis in the
     natural environment. Falls Church, VA: AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety.
Ergon-Rowe, E., Ichinose, C.K., & Clark, H.B. ~1991!. Dissemination of self-help information for
     families: An evaluation of parent use of three child-rearing advice booklets. Child & Family
     Behavior Therapy, 13, 59–73.
Fawcett, S.B., Lewis, R.K., Paine-Andrews, A., Francisco, V.T., Richter, K.P., Williams, E.L., &
     Copple, B. ~1997!. Evaluating community coalitions for prevention of substance abuse: The
     case of Project Freedom. Health Education & Behavior, 24~6!, 812–828.
Flannery, D.J., Vazsonyi, A.T., Liau, A.K., Guo, S., Powell, K.E., Atha, H., Vesterdal, W., & Embry,
     D. ~2003!. Initial behavior outcomes for the PeaceBuilders universal school based violence
     prevention program. Developmental Psychology, 39, 292–308.
Forman, S.G. ~1980!. A comparison of cognitive training and response cost procedures in mod-
     ifying aggressive behavior of elementary school children. Behavior Therapy, 11, 594 – 600.
Foxx, R.M., & Schaeffer, M.H. ~1981!. A company-based lottery to reduce the personal driving
     of employees. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 14, 273–285.
Gardner, R., Heward, W.L., & Grossi, T.A. ~1994!. Effects of response cards on student partici-
     pation and academic achievement: A systematic replication with inner-city students during
     whole-class science instruction. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 27, 63–71.
Geller, E.S. ~1973!. Prompting anti-litter behaviors. In Proceedings of the Annual Convention of
     the American Psychological Association ~pp. 907–908!. Washington, DC: American Psycho-
     logical Association.
Gottfredson, D.C. ~1986!. An empirical test of school-based environmental and individual inter-
     ventions to reduce the risk of delinquent behavior. Criminology 24, 705–731.
Gottfredson, D.C., Gottfredson, G.D., & Hybl, L.G. ~1993!. Managing adolescent behavior: A
     multiyear, multischool study. American Educational Research Journal, 30, 179–215.
Green, R.B., Hardison, W.L., & Greene, B.F. ~1984!. Turning the table on advice programs for
     parents: Using placemats to enhance family interaction at restaurants. Journal of Applied
     Behavior Analysis, 17, 497– 508.
590   •    Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004


Greenwood, C.R. ~1991!. Classwide peer tutoring: Longitudinal effects on the reading, language,
     and mathematics achievement of at-risk students. Journal of Reading, Writing & Learning
     Disabilities International, 7, 105–123.
Greenwood, C.R., Terry, B., Utley, C.A., Montagna, D., & Walker, D. ~1993!. Achievement,
     placement, and services: Middle school benefits of classwide peer tutoring used at the
     elementary school. School Psychology Review, 22, 497– 516.
Hallfors, D., & Godette, D. ~2002!. Will the ‘Principles of Effectiveness’ improve prevention
     practice? Early findings from a diffusion study. Health Education Research, 17, 461– 470.
Hallfors, D., Hyunsan, C., Livert, D., & Kadushin, C. ~2000!. Fighting back against substance
     abuse: Are community coalitions winning? American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 23~4!,
     237–324.
Hawkins, J.D., Catalano, R.F., & Miller, J.Y. ~1992!. Risk and protective factors for alcohol and
     other drug problems in adolescence and early adulthood: Implications for substance abuse
     prevention. Psychological Bulletin, 112 ~1!, 64 –105.
Honig, A.S. ~1994!. Comforting babies in public spaces. Early Child Development & Care, 97,
     165–173.
Jarrett, O.S., Maxwell, D.M., Dickerson, C., Hoge, P., Davies, G., & Yetley, A. ~1998!. Impact of
     recess on classroom behavior: Group effects and individual differences. The Journal of
     Educational Research, 92~2!, 121–126.
Jones, F.H., Fremouw, W., & Carples, S. ~1977!. Pyramid training of elementary school teachers
     to use a classroom management “skill package.” Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 10,
     239–253.
Kahne, J., & Bailey, K. ~1999!. The role of social capital in youth development: The case of “I
     Have a Dream” programs. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 21, 321–343.
Kelley, M.L., & McCain, A.P. ~1995!. Promoting academic performance in inattentive children:
     The relative efficacy of school-home notes with and without response cost. Behavior Mod-
     ification, 19, 357–375.
Kendall, P.C., & Finch, A.J. ~1976!. A cognitive-behavioral treatment for impulse control: A case
     study. Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology, 44, 852–857.
Krantz, P.J., & Risley, T.R. ~1972!. The organization of group care environments: Behavioral
     ecology in the classroom. Retrieved from http:00www.eduref.org
Langer, I., Rieckhof, A., Steinbach, I., & Tausch, A.M. ~1973!. Mother–child interactions outside
     their homes. Psychologie in Erziehung und Unterricht, 20, 361–376.
Lewis, R.K., Paine-Andrews, A., Fawcett, S.B., Francisco, V.T., Richter, K.P., Copple, B., & Cop-
     ple, J.E. ~1996!. Evaluating the effects of a community coalition’s efforts to reduce illegal
     sales of alcohol and tobacco products to minors. Journal of Community Health, 21~6!,
     429– 436.
Lewis, T.J., Powers, L.J., Kelk, M.J., & Newcomer, L.L. ~2002!. Reducing problem behaviors on
     the playground: An investigation of the application of school-wide positive behavior sup-
     ports. Psychology in the Schools, 39, 181–190.
Little, L.M., & Kelley, M.L. ~1989!. The efficacy of response cost procedures for reducing
     children’s noncompliance to parental instructions. Behavior Therapy, 20, 525– 534.
Madsen, C.H., Jr., Becker, W.C., & Thomas, D.R. ~1968!. Rules, praise, and ignoring: Elements
     of elementary classroom control. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1, 139–150.
Mayer, G.R., & Butterworth, T.W. ~1979!. A preventive approach to school violence and vandal-
     ism: An experimental study. Personnel and Guidance Journal, 57, 436 – 441.
Mayer, G.R., Butterworth, T.W., Nafpaktitis, M., & Sulzer-Azaroff, B. ~1983!. Preventing school
     vandalism and improving discipline: A three-year study. Journal of Applied Behavior Analy-
     sis, 16, 355–369.
McDonald, L., & Sayger, T. ~1998!. Impact of a family and school based prevention program on
     protective factors for high risk youth. Drugs and Society 12, 61–85.
Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines   •   591

Modzeleski, W. ~2003, October 9!. Safe and drug-free schools program. In Daniel J. Flannery
     ~Director!, Violence prevention symposium. Symposium conducted at the meeting of the
     Institute for the Study and Prevention of Violence, Kent State University, Kent, OH.
Montemayor, R., & Flannery, D.J. ~1989!. A naturalistic study of the involvement of children and
     adolescents with their mothers and friends: Developmental differences in expressive behav-
     ior. Journal of Adolescent Research, 4, 3–14.
Moore, L.A., Waguespack, A.M., Wickstrom, K.F., Witt, J.C., & Gaydon, G.R. ~1994!. Mystery
     motivator: An effective and time efficient intervention. School Psychology Review, 23, 106 –117.
Murphy, H.A., Hutchison, J.M., & Bailey, J.S. ~1983!. Behavioral school psychology goes out-
     doors: The effect of organized games on playground aggression. Journal of Applied Behav-
     ior Analysis, 16, 29–35.
O’Donnell, J., Hawkins, J.D., Abbott, R.D., & Day, L.E. ~1995!. Preventing school failure, drug
     use, and delinquency among low-income children: Long-term intervention in elementary
     schools. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 65~1!, 87–100.
Paine-Andrews, A., Fawcett, S.B., Richter, K.P., Berkley, J.Y., Williams, E.L., & Lopez, C.M.
     ~1996!. Community coalitions to prevent adolescent substance abuse: The case of the “Project
     Freedom: Replication initiative. Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Community,
     14, 81–99.
Pellegrini, A.D., & Davis, P.D. ~1993!. Relations between children’s playground and classroom
     behavior. British Journal of Educational Psychology, 63, 88–95.
Reynolds, L.K., & Kelley, M.L. ~1997!. The efficacy of a response cost-based treatment package
     for managing aggressive behavior in preschoolers. Behavior Modification, 21, 216 –230.
Rosenkoetter, S.E., & Fowler, S.A. ~1986!. Teaching mainstreamed children to manage daily
     transitions. Teaching Exceptional Children, 19, 20–23.
Rust, L. ~1993!. Parents and children shopping together: A new approach to qualitative analysis
     of observational data. Journal of Advertising Research, 33, 65–70.
Rutter, M. ~1983!. School effects on pupil progress: Research findings and policy implications.
     Child Development, 54, 1–29.
Sanders, M.R., & Hunter, A.C. ~1984!. An ecological analysis of children’s behaviour in super-
     markets. Australian Journal of Psychology, 36, 415– 427.
Secker-Walker, R.H., Gnich, W., Platt, S., & Lancaster, T. ~2002!. Community interventions for
     reducing smoking among adults. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, ~3!, CD001745.
Silvia, E.S., & Thorne, J. ~1997!. School-based drug prevention programs: A longitudinal study
     in selected school districts ~executive summary!. Research Triangle Park, NC: Research
     Triangle Institute.
Skinner, C.H., Fletcher, P.A., & Henington, C. ~1996!. Increasing learning rates by increasing
     student response rates: A summary of research. School Psychology Quarterly, 11, 313–325.
Skinner, C.H., Neddenriep, C.E., Robinson, S.L., Ervin, R., & Jones, K. ~2002!. Altering educa-
     tional environments through positive peer reporting: Prevention and remediation of social
     problems associated with behavior disorders. Psychology in the Schools, 39, 191–202.
Sugai, G., Horner, R.H., Dunlap, G., Hieneman, M., Lewis, T.J., Nelson, C.M., Scott, T., Liaupsin,
     C., Sailor, W., Turnbull, A.P., Turnbull, H.R., Wickham, D., Wilcox, B., & Ruef, M. ~2000!.
     Applying positive behavior support and functional behavioral assessment in schools. Jour-
     nal of Positive Behavior Interventions, 2, 131–143.
Webster-Stratton, C. ~1998!. Preventing conduct problems in head start children: Strengthening
     parenting competencies. Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology, 66, 715–730.
Wolfe, D.A., Kelly, J.A., & Drabman, R.S. ~1981!. “Beat the Buzzer”: A method for training an
     abusive mother to decrease recurrent child conflicts. Journal of Clinical Child Psychology,
     10, 114 –116.

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

Webinar Summary: Intersections Between Violence Against Children and Violence...
Webinar Summary: Intersections Between Violence Against Children and Violence...Webinar Summary: Intersections Between Violence Against Children and Violence...
Webinar Summary: Intersections Between Violence Against Children and Violence...UNICEF Office of Research - Innocenti
 
Substance Abuse research projects
Substance Abuse research projectsSubstance Abuse research projects
Substance Abuse research projectsDanielle Olson
 
ICE Action Plan V1.7
ICE Action Plan V1.7ICE Action Plan V1.7
ICE Action Plan V1.7zelko mustac
 
Data presetimagefill3 27.jpgdatapresetimagefill2-26.jpg
Data presetimagefill3 27.jpgdatapresetimagefill2-26.jpgData presetimagefill3 27.jpgdatapresetimagefill2-26.jpg
Data presetimagefill3 27.jpgdatapresetimagefill2-26.jpgAISHA232980
 
Comparing effectiveness of social media and peer-led social mobilization stra...
Comparing effectiveness of social media and peer-led social mobilization stra...Comparing effectiveness of social media and peer-led social mobilization stra...
Comparing effectiveness of social media and peer-led social mobilization stra...Munyuwiny Samuel
 
2 Integrating Child Protection and Community Engagement, Sierra Leone, Kathle...
2 Integrating Child Protection and Community Engagement, Sierra Leone, Kathle...2 Integrating Child Protection and Community Engagement, Sierra Leone, Kathle...
2 Integrating Child Protection and Community Engagement, Sierra Leone, Kathle...The Impact Initiative
 
Healthy relationships | Combating cyber bullying (Doc)
Healthy relationships | Combating cyber bullying (Doc)Healthy relationships | Combating cyber bullying (Doc)
Healthy relationships | Combating cyber bullying (Doc)Adele Ramos
 
Tietjen smith, tara nftej v24 n3 2014
Tietjen smith, tara nftej v24 n3 2014Tietjen smith, tara nftej v24 n3 2014
Tietjen smith, tara nftej v24 n3 2014William Kritsonis
 
National Poll: Awareness of Public Health Departments
National Poll: Awareness of Public Health DepartmentsNational Poll: Awareness of Public Health Departments
National Poll: Awareness of Public Health Departmentsde Beaumont Foundation
 
Intersections between Violence Against Children and Women: Prevention and Res...
Intersections between Violence Against Children and Women: Prevention and Res...Intersections between Violence Against Children and Women: Prevention and Res...
Intersections between Violence Against Children and Women: Prevention and Res...UNICEF Office of Research - Innocenti
 
Wed vs cadca
Wed vs cadcaWed vs cadca
Wed vs cadcaOPUNITE
 
Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Substance Abuse Treatment
Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Substance Abuse TreatmentRacial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Substance Abuse Treatment
Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Substance Abuse TreatmentAlexandraPerkins5
 

La actualidad más candente (18)

Investing in youth tobacco control
Investing in youth tobacco controlInvesting in youth tobacco control
Investing in youth tobacco control
 
Webinar Summary: Intersections Between Violence Against Children and Violence...
Webinar Summary: Intersections Between Violence Against Children and Violence...Webinar Summary: Intersections Between Violence Against Children and Violence...
Webinar Summary: Intersections Between Violence Against Children and Violence...
 
Substance Abuse research projects
Substance Abuse research projectsSubstance Abuse research projects
Substance Abuse research projects
 
ICE Action Plan V1.7
ICE Action Plan V1.7ICE Action Plan V1.7
ICE Action Plan V1.7
 
Data presetimagefill3 27.jpgdatapresetimagefill2-26.jpg
Data presetimagefill3 27.jpgdatapresetimagefill2-26.jpgData presetimagefill3 27.jpgdatapresetimagefill2-26.jpg
Data presetimagefill3 27.jpgdatapresetimagefill2-26.jpg
 
Final Plans Book Submission
Final Plans Book SubmissionFinal Plans Book Submission
Final Plans Book Submission
 
Comparing effectiveness of social media and peer-led social mobilization stra...
Comparing effectiveness of social media and peer-led social mobilization stra...Comparing effectiveness of social media and peer-led social mobilization stra...
Comparing effectiveness of social media and peer-led social mobilization stra...
 
2 Integrating Child Protection and Community Engagement, Sierra Leone, Kathle...
2 Integrating Child Protection and Community Engagement, Sierra Leone, Kathle...2 Integrating Child Protection and Community Engagement, Sierra Leone, Kathle...
2 Integrating Child Protection and Community Engagement, Sierra Leone, Kathle...
 
Healthy relationships | Combating cyber bullying (Doc)
Healthy relationships | Combating cyber bullying (Doc)Healthy relationships | Combating cyber bullying (Doc)
Healthy relationships | Combating cyber bullying (Doc)
 
Tietjen smith, tara nftej v24 n3 2014
Tietjen smith, tara nftej v24 n3 2014Tietjen smith, tara nftej v24 n3 2014
Tietjen smith, tara nftej v24 n3 2014
 
National Poll: Awareness of Public Health Departments
National Poll: Awareness of Public Health DepartmentsNational Poll: Awareness of Public Health Departments
National Poll: Awareness of Public Health Departments
 
November 2018 Directors Meeting - UofSC Division of Student Affairs and Acade...
November 2018 Directors Meeting - UofSC Division of Student Affairs and Acade...November 2018 Directors Meeting - UofSC Division of Student Affairs and Acade...
November 2018 Directors Meeting - UofSC Division of Student Affairs and Acade...
 
Sample essay on social work and substance abuse
Sample essay on social work and substance abuseSample essay on social work and substance abuse
Sample essay on social work and substance abuse
 
Intersections between Violence Against Children and Women: Prevention and Res...
Intersections between Violence Against Children and Women: Prevention and Res...Intersections between Violence Against Children and Women: Prevention and Res...
Intersections between Violence Against Children and Women: Prevention and Res...
 
More than 1 in 5 Americans are unpaid caregivers
More than 1 in 5 Americans are unpaid caregiversMore than 1 in 5 Americans are unpaid caregivers
More than 1 in 5 Americans are unpaid caregivers
 
Wed vs cadca
Wed vs cadcaWed vs cadca
Wed vs cadca
 
Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Substance Abuse Treatment
Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Substance Abuse TreatmentRacial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Substance Abuse Treatment
Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Substance Abuse Treatment
 
0971644
09716440971644
0971644
 

Destacado

Harvard Presentation on the Science of Bullying Prevetion
Harvard Presentation on the Science of Bullying PrevetionHarvard Presentation on the Science of Bullying Prevetion
Harvard Presentation on the Science of Bullying PrevetionDennis Embry
 
New Hampshire Keynote on Prevention for Whole County 11 10-11
New Hampshire Keynote on Prevention for Whole County 11 10-11New Hampshire Keynote on Prevention for Whole County 11 10-11
New Hampshire Keynote on Prevention for Whole County 11 10-11Dennis Embry
 
Weapons of Mass Disruption, oxford press 2006
Weapons of Mass Disruption, oxford press 2006Weapons of Mass Disruption, oxford press 2006
Weapons of Mass Disruption, oxford press 2006Dennis Embry
 
Cape May New Jersey Presentation on Prevention
Cape May New Jersey Presentation on PreventionCape May New Jersey Presentation on Prevention
Cape May New Jersey Presentation on PreventionDennis Embry
 
Connecticut Presentation for Major Change
Connecticut Presentation for Major ChangeConnecticut Presentation for Major Change
Connecticut Presentation for Major ChangeDennis Embry
 
New Jersey simple solutions to perplexing problems march 2012
New Jersey simple solutions to perplexing problems march 2012New Jersey simple solutions to perplexing problems march 2012
New Jersey simple solutions to perplexing problems march 2012Dennis Embry
 
CAPE MAY: A Different Scientific Perspective About the Causes and Cures of Bu...
CAPE MAY: A Different Scientific Perspective About the Causes and Cures of Bu...CAPE MAY: A Different Scientific Perspective About the Causes and Cures of Bu...
CAPE MAY: A Different Scientific Perspective About the Causes and Cures of Bu...Dennis Embry
 

Destacado (7)

Harvard Presentation on the Science of Bullying Prevetion
Harvard Presentation on the Science of Bullying PrevetionHarvard Presentation on the Science of Bullying Prevetion
Harvard Presentation on the Science of Bullying Prevetion
 
New Hampshire Keynote on Prevention for Whole County 11 10-11
New Hampshire Keynote on Prevention for Whole County 11 10-11New Hampshire Keynote on Prevention for Whole County 11 10-11
New Hampshire Keynote on Prevention for Whole County 11 10-11
 
Weapons of Mass Disruption, oxford press 2006
Weapons of Mass Disruption, oxford press 2006Weapons of Mass Disruption, oxford press 2006
Weapons of Mass Disruption, oxford press 2006
 
Cape May New Jersey Presentation on Prevention
Cape May New Jersey Presentation on PreventionCape May New Jersey Presentation on Prevention
Cape May New Jersey Presentation on Prevention
 
Connecticut Presentation for Major Change
Connecticut Presentation for Major ChangeConnecticut Presentation for Major Change
Connecticut Presentation for Major Change
 
New Jersey simple solutions to perplexing problems march 2012
New Jersey simple solutions to perplexing problems march 2012New Jersey simple solutions to perplexing problems march 2012
New Jersey simple solutions to perplexing problems march 2012
 
CAPE MAY: A Different Scientific Perspective About the Causes and Cures of Bu...
CAPE MAY: A Different Scientific Perspective About the Causes and Cures of Bu...CAPE MAY: A Different Scientific Perspective About the Causes and Cures of Bu...
CAPE MAY: A Different Scientific Perspective About the Causes and Cures of Bu...
 

Similar a Evidence-based kernels for community change and prevention

Reclaiming Futures: Programa Tratamiento Rehabilitación Consumo de Drogas EE.UU.
Reclaiming Futures: Programa Tratamiento Rehabilitación Consumo de Drogas EE.UU.Reclaiming Futures: Programa Tratamiento Rehabilitación Consumo de Drogas EE.UU.
Reclaiming Futures: Programa Tratamiento Rehabilitación Consumo de Drogas EE.UU.Francisco J. Estrada Vásquez
 
86J Public Health Management Practice, 1999, 5(5), 86–97.docx
86J Public Health Management Practice, 1999, 5(5), 86–97.docx86J Public Health Management Practice, 1999, 5(5), 86–97.docx
86J Public Health Management Practice, 1999, 5(5), 86–97.docxransayo
 
Public Health Approach to Youth Violence Prevention
Public Health Approach to Youth Violence PreventionPublic Health Approach to Youth Violence Prevention
Public Health Approach to Youth Violence PreventionCourtney Bartlett
 
CDC 2018-Evidence-Based-Strategies For Preventing Opioid Overdose
CDC 2018-Evidence-Based-Strategies For Preventing Opioid OverdoseCDC 2018-Evidence-Based-Strategies For Preventing Opioid Overdose
CDC 2018-Evidence-Based-Strategies For Preventing Opioid OverdoseCassondra Turner McArthur
 
Building the Evidence for Violence Prevention and Mitigation Interventions: A...
Building the Evidence for Violence Prevention and Mitigation Interventions: A...Building the Evidence for Violence Prevention and Mitigation Interventions: A...
Building the Evidence for Violence Prevention and Mitigation Interventions: A...JSI
 
Chapter 5 5.   Eaton Tool Company has fixed costs of $255,000,.docx
Chapter 5 5.   Eaton Tool Company has fixed costs of $255,000,.docxChapter 5 5.   Eaton Tool Company has fixed costs of $255,000,.docx
Chapter 5 5.   Eaton Tool Company has fixed costs of $255,000,.docxchristinemaritza
 
Risks and Strategies Associated with Psychoactive Drugs Use and Young People
Risks and Strategies Associated with Psychoactive Drugs Use and Young PeopleRisks and Strategies Associated with Psychoactive Drugs Use and Young People
Risks and Strategies Associated with Psychoactive Drugs Use and Young PeoplePatricia Gorman
 
Analisis Jurnal (Using PICO Model)
Analisis Jurnal (Using PICO Model)Analisis Jurnal (Using PICO Model)
Analisis Jurnal (Using PICO Model)Argitya Righo
 
Ea 5 peterson perry
Ea 5 peterson perryEa 5 peterson perry
Ea 5 peterson perryOPUNITE
 
CON 321 Health Related Research.docx
CON 321 Health Related Research.docxCON 321 Health Related Research.docx
CON 321 Health Related Research.docxwrite31
 
Only scholar authors. Response has to be  1 paragraph and references.docx
Only scholar authors. Response has to be  1 paragraph and references.docxOnly scholar authors. Response has to be  1 paragraph and references.docx
Only scholar authors. Response has to be  1 paragraph and references.docxamit657720
 
Community based hiv interventions
Community based hiv interventionsCommunity based hiv interventions
Community based hiv interventionsYvonne Obrien
 
EPS 558 Individual exploration: Adolescent Addiction
EPS 558 Individual exploration: Adolescent AddictionEPS 558 Individual exploration: Adolescent Addiction
EPS 558 Individual exploration: Adolescent Addictionmelam09
 
00 Networks of People Who Use Opiods Nonmedically: Reports from Rural Souther...
00 Networks of People Who Use Opiods Nonmedically: Reports from Rural Souther...00 Networks of People Who Use Opiods Nonmedically: Reports from Rural Souther...
00 Networks of People Who Use Opiods Nonmedically: Reports from Rural Souther...Duke Network Analysis Center
 
Tx And Referral
Tx And ReferralTx And Referral
Tx And ReferralJamie Katz
 
NURS612 Population Health Essay.docx
NURS612 Population Health Essay.docxNURS612 Population Health Essay.docx
NURS612 Population Health Essay.docx4934bk
 
substance use in children and young adults
substance use in children and young adultssubstance use in children and young adults
substance use in children and young adultsHimanshi Walia
 
Criminal Behavior in Your Community HW.docx
Criminal Behavior in Your Community HW.docxCriminal Behavior in Your Community HW.docx
Criminal Behavior in Your Community HW.docxstudywriters
 
New York State Drug Court Program
New York State Drug Court ProgramNew York State Drug Court Program
New York State Drug Court ProgramErikaAGoyer
 

Similar a Evidence-based kernels for community change and prevention (20)

Reclaiming Futures: Programa Tratamiento Rehabilitación Consumo de Drogas EE.UU.
Reclaiming Futures: Programa Tratamiento Rehabilitación Consumo de Drogas EE.UU.Reclaiming Futures: Programa Tratamiento Rehabilitación Consumo de Drogas EE.UU.
Reclaiming Futures: Programa Tratamiento Rehabilitación Consumo de Drogas EE.UU.
 
86J Public Health Management Practice, 1999, 5(5), 86–97.docx
86J Public Health Management Practice, 1999, 5(5), 86–97.docx86J Public Health Management Practice, 1999, 5(5), 86–97.docx
86J Public Health Management Practice, 1999, 5(5), 86–97.docx
 
Public Health Approach to Youth Violence Prevention
Public Health Approach to Youth Violence PreventionPublic Health Approach to Youth Violence Prevention
Public Health Approach to Youth Violence Prevention
 
CDC 2018-Evidence-Based-Strategies For Preventing Opioid Overdose
CDC 2018-Evidence-Based-Strategies For Preventing Opioid OverdoseCDC 2018-Evidence-Based-Strategies For Preventing Opioid Overdose
CDC 2018-Evidence-Based-Strategies For Preventing Opioid Overdose
 
Building the Evidence for Violence Prevention and Mitigation Interventions: A...
Building the Evidence for Violence Prevention and Mitigation Interventions: A...Building the Evidence for Violence Prevention and Mitigation Interventions: A...
Building the Evidence for Violence Prevention and Mitigation Interventions: A...
 
Chapter 5 5.   Eaton Tool Company has fixed costs of $255,000,.docx
Chapter 5 5.   Eaton Tool Company has fixed costs of $255,000,.docxChapter 5 5.   Eaton Tool Company has fixed costs of $255,000,.docx
Chapter 5 5.   Eaton Tool Company has fixed costs of $255,000,.docx
 
Risks and Strategies Associated with Psychoactive Drugs Use and Young People
Risks and Strategies Associated with Psychoactive Drugs Use and Young PeopleRisks and Strategies Associated with Psychoactive Drugs Use and Young People
Risks and Strategies Associated with Psychoactive Drugs Use and Young People
 
Preventingdruguse 2
Preventingdruguse 2Preventingdruguse 2
Preventingdruguse 2
 
Analisis Jurnal (Using PICO Model)
Analisis Jurnal (Using PICO Model)Analisis Jurnal (Using PICO Model)
Analisis Jurnal (Using PICO Model)
 
Ea 5 peterson perry
Ea 5 peterson perryEa 5 peterson perry
Ea 5 peterson perry
 
CON 321 Health Related Research.docx
CON 321 Health Related Research.docxCON 321 Health Related Research.docx
CON 321 Health Related Research.docx
 
Only scholar authors. Response has to be  1 paragraph and references.docx
Only scholar authors. Response has to be  1 paragraph and references.docxOnly scholar authors. Response has to be  1 paragraph and references.docx
Only scholar authors. Response has to be  1 paragraph and references.docx
 
Community based hiv interventions
Community based hiv interventionsCommunity based hiv interventions
Community based hiv interventions
 
EPS 558 Individual exploration: Adolescent Addiction
EPS 558 Individual exploration: Adolescent AddictionEPS 558 Individual exploration: Adolescent Addiction
EPS 558 Individual exploration: Adolescent Addiction
 
00 Networks of People Who Use Opiods Nonmedically: Reports from Rural Souther...
00 Networks of People Who Use Opiods Nonmedically: Reports from Rural Souther...00 Networks of People Who Use Opiods Nonmedically: Reports from Rural Souther...
00 Networks of People Who Use Opiods Nonmedically: Reports from Rural Souther...
 
Tx And Referral
Tx And ReferralTx And Referral
Tx And Referral
 
NURS612 Population Health Essay.docx
NURS612 Population Health Essay.docxNURS612 Population Health Essay.docx
NURS612 Population Health Essay.docx
 
substance use in children and young adults
substance use in children and young adultssubstance use in children and young adults
substance use in children and young adults
 
Criminal Behavior in Your Community HW.docx
Criminal Behavior in Your Community HW.docxCriminal Behavior in Your Community HW.docx
Criminal Behavior in Your Community HW.docx
 
New York State Drug Court Program
New York State Drug Court ProgramNew York State Drug Court Program
New York State Drug Court Program
 

Más de Dennis Embry

Matching Law Simple Illustration with Students.pptx
Matching Law Simple Illustration with Students.pptxMatching Law Simple Illustration with Students.pptx
Matching Law Simple Illustration with Students.pptxDennis Embry
 
Creating an Evidence-Based Approach to Lifespan Suicide Prevention
Creating an Evidence-Based Approach to Lifespan Suicide PreventionCreating an Evidence-Based Approach to Lifespan Suicide Prevention
Creating an Evidence-Based Approach to Lifespan Suicide PreventionDennis Embry
 
Three Easy Pieces for Maternal and Child Health Policy: MACHs Roundtable 2012
Three Easy Pieces for Maternal and Child Health Policy: MACHs Roundtable 2012  Three Easy Pieces for Maternal and Child Health Policy: MACHs Roundtable 2012
Three Easy Pieces for Maternal and Child Health Policy: MACHs Roundtable 2012 Dennis Embry
 
Upstream alcohol prevention rowan university
Upstream alcohol prevention rowan universityUpstream alcohol prevention rowan university
Upstream alcohol prevention rowan universityDennis Embry
 
Rapid results for usa jobs and child family wellbeing
Rapid results for usa jobs and child family wellbeingRapid results for usa jobs and child family wellbeing
Rapid results for usa jobs and child family wellbeingDennis Embry
 
Connecticut nurturing environments for rapid results rev2
Connecticut nurturing environments for rapid results rev2Connecticut nurturing environments for rapid results rev2
Connecticut nurturing environments for rapid results rev2Dennis Embry
 
Creating a culture of prevention and recovery
Creating a culture of prevention and recoveryCreating a culture of prevention and recovery
Creating a culture of prevention and recoveryDennis Embry
 
Biglan et al the critical role of nurturing environments for promoting human ...
Biglan et al the critical role of nurturing environments for promoting human ...Biglan et al the critical role of nurturing environments for promoting human ...
Biglan et al the critical role of nurturing environments for promoting human ...Dennis Embry
 
PAX GBG Tune Up Webinar
PAX GBG Tune Up WebinarPAX GBG Tune Up Webinar
PAX GBG Tune Up WebinarDennis Embry
 
Evidence-Based Crime Prevention, Manitoba 2012
Evidence-Based Crime Prevention, Manitoba 2012Evidence-Based Crime Prevention, Manitoba 2012
Evidence-Based Crime Prevention, Manitoba 2012Dennis Embry
 
Keynote talk: Vermont Assn. for Mental Health and Friends of Recovery Annual...
Keynote talk:  Vermont Assn. for Mental Health and Friends of Recovery Annual...Keynote talk:  Vermont Assn. for Mental Health and Friends of Recovery Annual...
Keynote talk: Vermont Assn. for Mental Health and Friends of Recovery Annual...Dennis Embry
 
Women In Medicine University of Kansas
Women In Medicine University of KansasWomen In Medicine University of Kansas
Women In Medicine University of KansasDennis Embry
 
New prevention for everyone washington state aug 2011 copy
New prevention for everyone washington state aug 2011 copyNew prevention for everyone washington state aug 2011 copy
New prevention for everyone washington state aug 2011 copyDennis Embry
 
Nurturing the genius of genes the new frontier of education, therapy, and un...
Nurturing the genius of genes  the new frontier of education, therapy, and un...Nurturing the genius of genes  the new frontier of education, therapy, and un...
Nurturing the genius of genes the new frontier of education, therapy, and un...Dennis Embry
 
Harvard University Brief on Causes and Cures of Bullying and Harassment
Harvard University Brief on Causes and Cures of Bullying and Harassment Harvard University Brief on Causes and Cures of Bullying and Harassment
Harvard University Brief on Causes and Cures of Bullying and Harassment Dennis Embry
 
Our Futures Meeting in Central Florida
Our Futures Meeting in Central FloridaOur Futures Meeting in Central Florida
Our Futures Meeting in Central FloridaDennis Embry
 
Creating Evidence-Based Practices When None Exist
Creating Evidence-Based Practices When None ExistCreating Evidence-Based Practices When None Exist
Creating Evidence-Based Practices When None ExistDennis Embry
 
Brief on the Science Behind Civility and the Mayors' Accord
Brief on the Science Behind Civility and the Mayors' AccordBrief on the Science Behind Civility and the Mayors' Accord
Brief on the Science Behind Civility and the Mayors' AccordDennis Embry
 
PAX Good Behavior Game Data Outcomes
PAX Good Behavior Game Data OutcomesPAX Good Behavior Game Data Outcomes
PAX Good Behavior Game Data OutcomesDennis Embry
 
Preventing Mental, Emotional and Behavioral Disorders Part 2
Preventing Mental, Emotional and Behavioral Disorders Part 2Preventing Mental, Emotional and Behavioral Disorders Part 2
Preventing Mental, Emotional and Behavioral Disorders Part 2Dennis Embry
 

Más de Dennis Embry (20)

Matching Law Simple Illustration with Students.pptx
Matching Law Simple Illustration with Students.pptxMatching Law Simple Illustration with Students.pptx
Matching Law Simple Illustration with Students.pptx
 
Creating an Evidence-Based Approach to Lifespan Suicide Prevention
Creating an Evidence-Based Approach to Lifespan Suicide PreventionCreating an Evidence-Based Approach to Lifespan Suicide Prevention
Creating an Evidence-Based Approach to Lifespan Suicide Prevention
 
Three Easy Pieces for Maternal and Child Health Policy: MACHs Roundtable 2012
Three Easy Pieces for Maternal and Child Health Policy: MACHs Roundtable 2012  Three Easy Pieces for Maternal and Child Health Policy: MACHs Roundtable 2012
Three Easy Pieces for Maternal and Child Health Policy: MACHs Roundtable 2012
 
Upstream alcohol prevention rowan university
Upstream alcohol prevention rowan universityUpstream alcohol prevention rowan university
Upstream alcohol prevention rowan university
 
Rapid results for usa jobs and child family wellbeing
Rapid results for usa jobs and child family wellbeingRapid results for usa jobs and child family wellbeing
Rapid results for usa jobs and child family wellbeing
 
Connecticut nurturing environments for rapid results rev2
Connecticut nurturing environments for rapid results rev2Connecticut nurturing environments for rapid results rev2
Connecticut nurturing environments for rapid results rev2
 
Creating a culture of prevention and recovery
Creating a culture of prevention and recoveryCreating a culture of prevention and recovery
Creating a culture of prevention and recovery
 
Biglan et al the critical role of nurturing environments for promoting human ...
Biglan et al the critical role of nurturing environments for promoting human ...Biglan et al the critical role of nurturing environments for promoting human ...
Biglan et al the critical role of nurturing environments for promoting human ...
 
PAX GBG Tune Up Webinar
PAX GBG Tune Up WebinarPAX GBG Tune Up Webinar
PAX GBG Tune Up Webinar
 
Evidence-Based Crime Prevention, Manitoba 2012
Evidence-Based Crime Prevention, Manitoba 2012Evidence-Based Crime Prevention, Manitoba 2012
Evidence-Based Crime Prevention, Manitoba 2012
 
Keynote talk: Vermont Assn. for Mental Health and Friends of Recovery Annual...
Keynote talk:  Vermont Assn. for Mental Health and Friends of Recovery Annual...Keynote talk:  Vermont Assn. for Mental Health and Friends of Recovery Annual...
Keynote talk: Vermont Assn. for Mental Health and Friends of Recovery Annual...
 
Women In Medicine University of Kansas
Women In Medicine University of KansasWomen In Medicine University of Kansas
Women In Medicine University of Kansas
 
New prevention for everyone washington state aug 2011 copy
New prevention for everyone washington state aug 2011 copyNew prevention for everyone washington state aug 2011 copy
New prevention for everyone washington state aug 2011 copy
 
Nurturing the genius of genes the new frontier of education, therapy, and un...
Nurturing the genius of genes  the new frontier of education, therapy, and un...Nurturing the genius of genes  the new frontier of education, therapy, and un...
Nurturing the genius of genes the new frontier of education, therapy, and un...
 
Harvard University Brief on Causes and Cures of Bullying and Harassment
Harvard University Brief on Causes and Cures of Bullying and Harassment Harvard University Brief on Causes and Cures of Bullying and Harassment
Harvard University Brief on Causes and Cures of Bullying and Harassment
 
Our Futures Meeting in Central Florida
Our Futures Meeting in Central FloridaOur Futures Meeting in Central Florida
Our Futures Meeting in Central Florida
 
Creating Evidence-Based Practices When None Exist
Creating Evidence-Based Practices When None ExistCreating Evidence-Based Practices When None Exist
Creating Evidence-Based Practices When None Exist
 
Brief on the Science Behind Civility and the Mayors' Accord
Brief on the Science Behind Civility and the Mayors' AccordBrief on the Science Behind Civility and the Mayors' Accord
Brief on the Science Behind Civility and the Mayors' Accord
 
PAX Good Behavior Game Data Outcomes
PAX Good Behavior Game Data OutcomesPAX Good Behavior Game Data Outcomes
PAX Good Behavior Game Data Outcomes
 
Preventing Mental, Emotional and Behavioral Disorders Part 2
Preventing Mental, Emotional and Behavioral Disorders Part 2Preventing Mental, Emotional and Behavioral Disorders Part 2
Preventing Mental, Emotional and Behavioral Disorders Part 2
 

Último

Night 7k to 12k Chennai City Center Call Girls 👉👉 7427069034⭐⭐ 100% Genuine E...
Night 7k to 12k Chennai City Center Call Girls 👉👉 7427069034⭐⭐ 100% Genuine E...Night 7k to 12k Chennai City Center Call Girls 👉👉 7427069034⭐⭐ 100% Genuine E...
Night 7k to 12k Chennai City Center Call Girls 👉👉 7427069034⭐⭐ 100% Genuine E...hotbabesbook
 
All Time Service Available Call Girls Marine Drive 📳 9820252231 For 18+ VIP C...
All Time Service Available Call Girls Marine Drive 📳 9820252231 For 18+ VIP C...All Time Service Available Call Girls Marine Drive 📳 9820252231 For 18+ VIP C...
All Time Service Available Call Girls Marine Drive 📳 9820252231 For 18+ VIP C...Arohi Goyal
 
Bangalore Call Girls Nelamangala Number 7001035870 Meetin With Bangalore Esc...
Bangalore Call Girls Nelamangala Number 7001035870  Meetin With Bangalore Esc...Bangalore Call Girls Nelamangala Number 7001035870  Meetin With Bangalore Esc...
Bangalore Call Girls Nelamangala Number 7001035870 Meetin With Bangalore Esc...narwatsonia7
 
Russian Escorts Girls Nehru Place ZINATHI 🔝9711199012 ☪ 24/7 Call Girls Delhi
Russian Escorts Girls  Nehru Place ZINATHI 🔝9711199012 ☪ 24/7 Call Girls DelhiRussian Escorts Girls  Nehru Place ZINATHI 🔝9711199012 ☪ 24/7 Call Girls Delhi
Russian Escorts Girls Nehru Place ZINATHI 🔝9711199012 ☪ 24/7 Call Girls DelhiAlinaDevecerski
 
Call Girls Bangalore Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Bangalore Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Bangalore Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Bangalore Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableDipal Arora
 
Top Rated Bangalore Call Girls Mg Road ⟟ 8250192130 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex...
Top Rated Bangalore Call Girls Mg Road ⟟ 8250192130 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex...Top Rated Bangalore Call Girls Mg Road ⟟ 8250192130 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex...
Top Rated Bangalore Call Girls Mg Road ⟟ 8250192130 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex...narwatsonia7
 
Call Girls Aurangabad Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Aurangabad Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Aurangabad Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Aurangabad Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableDipal Arora
 
Russian Call Girls in Jaipur Riya WhatsApp ❤8445551418 VIP Call Girls Jaipur
Russian Call Girls in Jaipur Riya WhatsApp ❤8445551418 VIP Call Girls JaipurRussian Call Girls in Jaipur Riya WhatsApp ❤8445551418 VIP Call Girls Jaipur
Russian Call Girls in Jaipur Riya WhatsApp ❤8445551418 VIP Call Girls Jaipurparulsinha
 
Call Girls Kochi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Kochi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Kochi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Kochi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableDipal Arora
 
Call Girls Nagpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Nagpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Nagpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Nagpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableDipal Arora
 
Vip Call Girls Anna Salai Chennai 👉 8250192130 ❣️💯 Top Class Girls Available
Vip Call Girls Anna Salai Chennai 👉 8250192130 ❣️💯 Top Class Girls AvailableVip Call Girls Anna Salai Chennai 👉 8250192130 ❣️💯 Top Class Girls Available
Vip Call Girls Anna Salai Chennai 👉 8250192130 ❣️💯 Top Class Girls AvailableNehru place Escorts
 
The Most Attractive Hyderabad Call Girls Kothapet 𖠋 6297143586 𖠋 Will You Mis...
The Most Attractive Hyderabad Call Girls Kothapet 𖠋 6297143586 𖠋 Will You Mis...The Most Attractive Hyderabad Call Girls Kothapet 𖠋 6297143586 𖠋 Will You Mis...
The Most Attractive Hyderabad Call Girls Kothapet 𖠋 6297143586 𖠋 Will You Mis...chandars293
 
Call Girls Ooty Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Ooty Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Ooty Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Ooty Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableDipal Arora
 
Call Girls Jabalpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Jabalpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Jabalpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Jabalpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableDipal Arora
 
Book Paid Powai Call Girls Mumbai 𖠋 9930245274 𖠋Low Budget Full Independent H...
Book Paid Powai Call Girls Mumbai 𖠋 9930245274 𖠋Low Budget Full Independent H...Book Paid Powai Call Girls Mumbai 𖠋 9930245274 𖠋Low Budget Full Independent H...
Book Paid Powai Call Girls Mumbai 𖠋 9930245274 𖠋Low Budget Full Independent H...Call Girls in Nagpur High Profile
 
High Profile Call Girls Coimbatore Saanvi☎️ 8250192130 Independent Escort Se...
High Profile Call Girls Coimbatore Saanvi☎️  8250192130 Independent Escort Se...High Profile Call Girls Coimbatore Saanvi☎️  8250192130 Independent Escort Se...
High Profile Call Girls Coimbatore Saanvi☎️ 8250192130 Independent Escort Se...narwatsonia7
 
Lucknow Call girls - 8800925952 - 24x7 service with hotel room
Lucknow Call girls - 8800925952 - 24x7 service with hotel roomLucknow Call girls - 8800925952 - 24x7 service with hotel room
Lucknow Call girls - 8800925952 - 24x7 service with hotel roomdiscovermytutordmt
 
Call Girls Varanasi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Varanasi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Varanasi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Varanasi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableDipal Arora
 
VIP Call Girls Indore Kirti 💚😋 9256729539 🚀 Indore Escorts
VIP Call Girls Indore Kirti 💚😋  9256729539 🚀 Indore EscortsVIP Call Girls Indore Kirti 💚😋  9256729539 🚀 Indore Escorts
VIP Call Girls Indore Kirti 💚😋 9256729539 🚀 Indore Escortsaditipandeya
 
Premium Call Girls Cottonpet Whatsapp 7001035870 Independent Escort Service
Premium Call Girls Cottonpet Whatsapp 7001035870 Independent Escort ServicePremium Call Girls Cottonpet Whatsapp 7001035870 Independent Escort Service
Premium Call Girls Cottonpet Whatsapp 7001035870 Independent Escort Servicevidya singh
 

Último (20)

Night 7k to 12k Chennai City Center Call Girls 👉👉 7427069034⭐⭐ 100% Genuine E...
Night 7k to 12k Chennai City Center Call Girls 👉👉 7427069034⭐⭐ 100% Genuine E...Night 7k to 12k Chennai City Center Call Girls 👉👉 7427069034⭐⭐ 100% Genuine E...
Night 7k to 12k Chennai City Center Call Girls 👉👉 7427069034⭐⭐ 100% Genuine E...
 
All Time Service Available Call Girls Marine Drive 📳 9820252231 For 18+ VIP C...
All Time Service Available Call Girls Marine Drive 📳 9820252231 For 18+ VIP C...All Time Service Available Call Girls Marine Drive 📳 9820252231 For 18+ VIP C...
All Time Service Available Call Girls Marine Drive 📳 9820252231 For 18+ VIP C...
 
Bangalore Call Girls Nelamangala Number 7001035870 Meetin With Bangalore Esc...
Bangalore Call Girls Nelamangala Number 7001035870  Meetin With Bangalore Esc...Bangalore Call Girls Nelamangala Number 7001035870  Meetin With Bangalore Esc...
Bangalore Call Girls Nelamangala Number 7001035870 Meetin With Bangalore Esc...
 
Russian Escorts Girls Nehru Place ZINATHI 🔝9711199012 ☪ 24/7 Call Girls Delhi
Russian Escorts Girls  Nehru Place ZINATHI 🔝9711199012 ☪ 24/7 Call Girls DelhiRussian Escorts Girls  Nehru Place ZINATHI 🔝9711199012 ☪ 24/7 Call Girls Delhi
Russian Escorts Girls Nehru Place ZINATHI 🔝9711199012 ☪ 24/7 Call Girls Delhi
 
Call Girls Bangalore Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Bangalore Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Bangalore Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Bangalore Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
 
Top Rated Bangalore Call Girls Mg Road ⟟ 8250192130 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex...
Top Rated Bangalore Call Girls Mg Road ⟟ 8250192130 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex...Top Rated Bangalore Call Girls Mg Road ⟟ 8250192130 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex...
Top Rated Bangalore Call Girls Mg Road ⟟ 8250192130 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex...
 
Call Girls Aurangabad Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Aurangabad Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Aurangabad Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Aurangabad Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
 
Russian Call Girls in Jaipur Riya WhatsApp ❤8445551418 VIP Call Girls Jaipur
Russian Call Girls in Jaipur Riya WhatsApp ❤8445551418 VIP Call Girls JaipurRussian Call Girls in Jaipur Riya WhatsApp ❤8445551418 VIP Call Girls Jaipur
Russian Call Girls in Jaipur Riya WhatsApp ❤8445551418 VIP Call Girls Jaipur
 
Call Girls Kochi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Kochi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Kochi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Kochi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
 
Call Girls Nagpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Nagpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Nagpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Nagpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
 
Vip Call Girls Anna Salai Chennai 👉 8250192130 ❣️💯 Top Class Girls Available
Vip Call Girls Anna Salai Chennai 👉 8250192130 ❣️💯 Top Class Girls AvailableVip Call Girls Anna Salai Chennai 👉 8250192130 ❣️💯 Top Class Girls Available
Vip Call Girls Anna Salai Chennai 👉 8250192130 ❣️💯 Top Class Girls Available
 
The Most Attractive Hyderabad Call Girls Kothapet 𖠋 6297143586 𖠋 Will You Mis...
The Most Attractive Hyderabad Call Girls Kothapet 𖠋 6297143586 𖠋 Will You Mis...The Most Attractive Hyderabad Call Girls Kothapet 𖠋 6297143586 𖠋 Will You Mis...
The Most Attractive Hyderabad Call Girls Kothapet 𖠋 6297143586 𖠋 Will You Mis...
 
Call Girls Ooty Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Ooty Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Ooty Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Ooty Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
 
Call Girls Jabalpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Jabalpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Jabalpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Jabalpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
 
Book Paid Powai Call Girls Mumbai 𖠋 9930245274 𖠋Low Budget Full Independent H...
Book Paid Powai Call Girls Mumbai 𖠋 9930245274 𖠋Low Budget Full Independent H...Book Paid Powai Call Girls Mumbai 𖠋 9930245274 𖠋Low Budget Full Independent H...
Book Paid Powai Call Girls Mumbai 𖠋 9930245274 𖠋Low Budget Full Independent H...
 
High Profile Call Girls Coimbatore Saanvi☎️ 8250192130 Independent Escort Se...
High Profile Call Girls Coimbatore Saanvi☎️  8250192130 Independent Escort Se...High Profile Call Girls Coimbatore Saanvi☎️  8250192130 Independent Escort Se...
High Profile Call Girls Coimbatore Saanvi☎️ 8250192130 Independent Escort Se...
 
Lucknow Call girls - 8800925952 - 24x7 service with hotel room
Lucknow Call girls - 8800925952 - 24x7 service with hotel roomLucknow Call girls - 8800925952 - 24x7 service with hotel room
Lucknow Call girls - 8800925952 - 24x7 service with hotel room
 
Call Girls Varanasi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Varanasi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Varanasi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Varanasi Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
 
VIP Call Girls Indore Kirti 💚😋 9256729539 🚀 Indore Escorts
VIP Call Girls Indore Kirti 💚😋  9256729539 🚀 Indore EscortsVIP Call Girls Indore Kirti 💚😋  9256729539 🚀 Indore Escorts
VIP Call Girls Indore Kirti 💚😋 9256729539 🚀 Indore Escorts
 
Premium Call Girls Cottonpet Whatsapp 7001035870 Independent Escort Service
Premium Call Girls Cottonpet Whatsapp 7001035870 Independent Escort ServicePremium Call Girls Cottonpet Whatsapp 7001035870 Independent Escort Service
Premium Call Girls Cottonpet Whatsapp 7001035870 Independent Escort Service
 

Evidence-based kernels for community change and prevention

  • 1. A R T I C L E COMMUNITY-BASED PREVENTION USING SIMPLE, LOW-COST, EVIDENCE-BASED KERNELS AND BEHAVIOR VACCINES Dennis D. Embry PAXIS Institute A paradox exists in community prevention of violence and drugs. Good research now exists on evidence-based programs, yet extensive expenditures on prevention have not produced community-level results. Various multiproblems are quite prevalent in the United States, such as violence, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), conduct problems, learning disabilities, depression, and other mood problems. Various studies have observed that intuitively appealing community-based coalitions and best practice requirements have not produced prevention gains as hoped for by many. Calls for more money, fidelity, or dose seem unlikely to succeed. Other alternatives may be possible. Most of the best practices aimed at preventing these community problems are composed of evidence-based kernels, which act on core principles of prevention (risk and protective factors). What is not widely known is that the evidence-based kernels are powerful in their own right. Evidence-based kernels are irreducible units of behavior-change technology, and they can be put together into behavioral vaccines (daily practices) with powerful longitudinal prevention results. Kernels and behavioral vaccines are simple, and they are not programs or curriculum in the conventional sense. This article presents examples of evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines that can be promoted easily across whole communities or states using social marketing principles. Widespread propagation of evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines could have a significant impact on communities and their prevention norms, providing low-cost alternatives and practical models for community psychology, public health, and policy makers. Behavioral kernels and vaccines can add needed precision to prevention science and community psychology. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Correspondence to: Dennis D. Embry, Ph.D., PAXIS Institute, P.O. Box 68494, Tucson, AZ 85737. E-mail: dde@paxis.org JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY, Vol. 32, No. 5, 575–591 (2004) © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI: 10.1002/jcop.20020
  • 2. 576 • Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004 Persistent efforts to apply weak or inefficient prevention programs in the United States result in annual expenditures of about 800 million dollars for safe and drug- free schools. However, these expenditures have produced little or no appreciable effect on either substance abuse or violence prevention based on previous national evaluations ~e.g., Silva & Thorne, 1997!. These negative findings led to a demand for compliance with principles of effectiveness: mandating needs assessments and adop- tion of evidence-based practices based on those needs. In their analysis of compli- ance, Hallfors and Godette ~2002! reported that few schools truly follow those principles of effectiveness. Furthermore, it is not clear from their analysis that such compliance can produce community-level changes in violence or substance abuse. They found many districts ~from a sample of 104 school districts in 12 states! appear to select research-based curricula, but the quality of implementation is low. Only 19% of the responding district coordinators indicated that schools were implementing a research- based curriculum with fidelity. Common problems included lack of teacher training, lack of requisite materials, partial use of required lessons and teaching strategies, and failure to deliver lessons to age-appropriate student groups. Hallfors and Godette concluded that low levels of funding, inadequate infrastructure, decentralized decision- making, and lack of program guidance have contributed to the slow progress in improving school-based prevention. All of these problems are becoming worse because of local and state cutbacks from economic crises in state and local governments. More money and resources to fix these issues simply will not happen for some time— especially with prevailing ethos on academic accountability. Finally, schools and the whole context of prevention have changed dramatically, with such things as No Child Left Behind, proclaim the federal leadership of safe and drug-free schools ~Modzeleski, 2003!. Other evidence challenges current political dogma of community-based approaches: a Cochrane Review of community programs aimed at adult use of tobacco and a study of the Fighting Back Initiatives. Secker-Walker, Gnich, Platt, and Lancaster ~2002! reported frustrating disappoint- ment about community-based programs to reduce tobacco use among adults. After reviewing 32 studies, they reported that the largest and best-conducted studies to detect an effect on prevalence of smoking were a disappointing failure. Federal and foundation initiatives continue to provide strong support for com- munity anti-drug, delinquency, and violence coalitions. The Fighting Back initiative from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation provides an excellent venue to test the full measure of a coordinated community approach, which was done in a report by Hallfors, Hyunsan, Livert, and Kadushin ~2002!. All stakeholders ~political, business, and community leaders! were invited to address substance-abuse issues and develop a comprehensive, coordinated response. The communities developed their own ideas for effective practice. The model of community-driven selection differs from efforts like the Minnesota Heart Health effort, which is fairly prescriptive across multiple communities to implement core and common practices. The Fighting Back initiative— the Cadillac of community-coalition model efforts—included public awareness, pre- vention, early intervention, relapse prevention, and some environmental strategies. As Hallfors and her colleagues noted, the Fighting Back study tested the community- empowerment model, not specific interventions. The Fighting Back evaluation sounds alarm bells for current, common community- empowerment approaches, and readers of this article are urged to read the full study. The research found:
  • 3. Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines • 577 1. no effect of strategies on child and youth outcomes, 2. a significant negative effect on adult substance-abuse outcomes, and 3. no effect of community strategies on outcomes. Perversely, the more high-dose strategies the communities did, the worse the substance abuse outcomes—that is, substance abuse increased. These findings soundly refuted the community-empowerment model. An exception to the litany of failure in community approaches is Project Freedom, a broad-based community effort to reduce alcohol and drug use in Wichita, Kansas. A unique partnership between the program and the evaluation ultimately helped develop something called the “Kansas Community Toolbox”—a data dashboard of community actions accessible online ~e.g., Fawcett et al., 1997; Paine-Andrews et al., 1996!. One of the first outcome efforts of Project Freedom was reported in 1996 by Lewis and others; it involved an adaptation of a previously validated procedure called “reward and reminder” by Biglan and others in 1995, which showed major reductions in illegal sales of tobacco to minors from about 50% to 20% of the attempts. In Wichita, Project Freedom members—consisting of adults and minors—issued citations to clerks in supermarkets, convenience stores, and liquor stores who were willing to sell alcohol and tobacco products to minors and issued commendations to clerks who refused to sell. For those liquor stores receiving the citizen’s surveillance, there was a marked decrease from 83% of stores selling alcohol to minors to 33%. In liquor stores not experiencing the intervention, there was a smaller decrease in alco- hol sales, from 45% to 36%. In Wyoming and Wisconsin, my colleagues and I have implemented the same basic reward and reminder ~citation and commendation! protocols using coalitions. The effort contains extensive documentation of exactly what to do and how to do it, along with technical assistance support provided by the state and nested inside a social marketing campaign. In both cases, the results have been quite powerful ~Table 1!. Both states are home rule, meaning no state enforcement of tobacco access laws. Both states have high rates of smoking among adults and adolescents. Wyoming results have been stable for three years, and the Wisconsin implementation had only two months of planning, coalition contracting, and training before the official tobacco inspections were conducted by a third party. Wisconsin’s population is ten times greater than Wyoming. The implementation of the Reward and Reminder protocol has been consistently effective in eight communities of Oregon ~Biglan et al., 1995!, in Wichita ~Lewis et al., 1996!, and in the whole states of Wyoming, as well as Wisconsin ~using officially reported state Synar inspection rates as required by law!. These iterations of community- Table 1. Official Percentage of Successful Illegal Sales of Tobacco to Minors 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Wyoming 43% 28.2% 44.3% 55.1% 8.9% 9.4% 8.65 Wisconsin 46.8% 22.6% 27.8% 22.4% 24.6% 33.7% 20.4% Baseline Reward and Reminder
  • 4. 578 • Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004 based efforts are different from traditional efforts. First, the basic intervention is simple, and community members can be trained to implement reward and reminder in a few hours. This creates “team spirit” and mutual reinforcement. Second, the results it produces are larger and faster than traditional policies and procedures. Thus, feedback happens quickly and the successes are fed to the media and commu- nity, creating a perceived norm. Third, the effects derive from concentrated imple- mentation of a simple evidence-based strategy with focused intensity. Then a community “tipping point” can happen. People are not flailing about on scores of different things. In many ways, these are the core principles that have been used successfully for years—from barn raising to fund raising for United Way. The example is useful as a metaphor of what might be done with kernels of evidence-based practices for preven- tion and will be explained later. The unfortunate failure of the “empowerment model” or the mandated menu selection of best practices versus a more-defined or constrained community replica- tion model has many implications for prevention. A fundamentally different approach reflecting the simplicity of the reward and reminder programs may be needed for communities if such issues as violence or substance abuse are to be prevented. EVIDENCE-BASED KERNELS AND BEHAVIORAL VACCINES FOR PREVENTION Lists of presumptive best practices, published by the U.S. Department of Education, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration, the Centers for Disease Con- trol and Prevention, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Prevention, Drug Strategies, and others, typically contain considerable overlap. The publication of these lists has created confusion about the trade name ~trademark! with the active ingredients of proven interventions. Many people falsely assume that the program is the active ingre- dient. For example, the Reward and Reminder ~Citation and Commendation! cam- paign for tobacco-access control described herein is not the active ingredient; it is a marketing name for something that contains a list of active ingredients supported by significant research. Searching for Active Ingredients in Prevention: Evidence-Based Kernels In pharmacy, an active ingredient is a chemical that produces some reliable effect. This article proposes a similar idea, but suggests a novel phrase, evidence-based behav- ioral kernels. What precisely is a kernel? In behavioral science, an evidence-based behavioral kernel is an irreducible unit of behavior-change technology that produces an observable, reliable result ~cause and effect, if you will!. Kernels can work individ- ually and can be combined ~compounded, in pharmacy! in ways to produce positive results. By coming to understand the active ingredients—evidence-based behavioral kernels—in prevention programs, one can begin to create a community-based culture of effective practices that might be more sustainable, especially when state and local government resources are stretched to the limit. How did the idea for behavioral kernels emerge? A number of leading preven- tion scientists was invited to meet at Stanford University to produce a consensus statement about prevention of child-rearing problems, particularly for children with serious multiproblems. Both Dr. Richard “Rico” Catalano and I were in attendance
  • 5. Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines • 579 and have created evidence-based “best practices” for prevention. We fell into a dia- logue about what was really “inside the box” of those best practices, which then revealed what might be described as behavioral kernels. Both of us first taught a universal, school-wide signal for quiet and transition. Both of us taught the teachers and staff to engage in frequent ritualized greetings on a daily basis with the stu- dents, such as shaking their hands as they enter or leave classes. In both cases, teach- ers, students, and peers are taught to praise and reinforce positive behaviors. Thus, Dr. Catalano’s work ~Seattle Social Development Project or SSDP, as it was originally called and now called SOAR! and my own earlier PeaceBuilders work ~Embry et al., 1996! actually used very similar protocols, packaged somewhat differently. Both pro- duce measurably positive benefits in well-controlled studies ~Flannery et al., 2003; O’Donnell, et al., 1995!. This coincidence was not singular: During another special meeting involving lead- ing scientists of violence prevention, Dr. Denise Gottfredson and I had a chance to review our respective work. While Dr. Gottfredson called her approach “an organiza- tional development model” ~Gottfredson, 1986; Gottfredson, Gottfredson, & Hybl, 1993! and I called mine “a social–emotional–cognitive competence” model ~e.g., Embry et al., 1996!, both of us used nearly identical reinforcement procedures of student behavior ~e.g., having recognitions read on the public address system!, which are embedded in a number of other evidence-based prevention programs such as Positive Behavior Support ~e.g., Sugai et al., 2000! and Constructive Discipline ~Mayer, Butter- worth, Nafpaktitis, & Sulzer-Azaroff, 1983!. The connections among the evidence- based prevention programs become even more apparent, tracing the intellectual and scientific roots via bibliographies. For example, all of the above-named major pro- grams cited the earlier work on the use of school-wide behavioral reinforcement protocols ~e.g., Mayer, & Butterworth, 1979!. Mayer, in turn, made use of other pio- neering work from behavior analysis in time-series studies of single classrooms or teachers ~e.g., Jones, Fremouw, & Carples, 1977; Madsen, Becker, & Thomas, 1968!. In a word, best practice programs are composed of evidence-based kernels that work on their own and can be formulated into combinations. Like life, which is encoded by genes to make proteins or structures, behavioral kernels are encoded by elemental behavioral equivalents of genes, discovered behav- ioral laws. A few examples include Matching Law, Extinction, Discriminative Stimuli, Variable Interval, Ratio Schedules, and many others that are derived from the basic research of psychology, sociology, anthropology, and even medical findings related to mood, traits, or behavior. These elemental units or laws, though, are not “alive” unless expressed as a behavioral kernel. The elemental units that create behavioral kernels are typically difficult to see under the naked eye, just like the genes or DNA, but are readily discernible in laboratory settings. Generally, almost anyone can use a behavioral kernel with very brief explanation or modeling, such as shaking hands, using a transition cues or writing a praise note— even without understanding the elemental units or “laws” making up the kernel. Interestingly, real people rather than scientists have invented most behavioral kernels, which then have been spread by imitation and verbal behavior through the principle of selection by consequences. Formal scientists, however, have studied many behav- ioral kernels quite extensively and improved them using theoretical knowledge of the underlying behavioral elements. Behavioral kernels ultimately have their roots in real people acting on the world—as everyday scientists who are acting on their social universe. Humans, unlike other primates, invent, adapt, and select many behavioral
  • 6. 580 • Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004 kernels to construct their social environment. Kernels can become a bit like verbal memes, self-replicating by imitation Criteria for Potential Behavioral Vaccines and Kernels for Changing Cultural Practices Kernels can be assembled to create behavioral vaccines, which are substantially differ- ent from prevention programs. A program is typically a curriculum or lessons that uses syllabi over days or weeks. Typically, the assumption is that after the completion of the program sequence, some change in behavior or knowledge happens. Thus, programs like Second Step or DARE have a curriculum plan and are completed over several weeks or months. But what is a behavioral vaccine? In a previous study ~Embry, 2002!, I detailed the characteristics of a behavioral vaccine: a! any intervention that inoculates recipients against morbidity or mortality, in this case, problematic, aggressive, or potentially dangerous or lethal behavior, hospitalization, incarceration, suicide, or murder; b! low cost, as exemplified by hand washing to prevent infections, diet and exer- cise to prevent high blood pressure and diabetes; c! ease of administration that would insure minimum costs and maximum ben- efits with daily routines, assuring every-day practice with a minimum of train- ing; and d! mass administration. Behavioral vaccines make it possible to directly reach as many people as is humanly possible with a minimum of costs, with no need for trained, technical, or professional personnel present. Behavioral vaccines are not the same as conventional “universal” prevention pro- grams, as is commonly articulated by federal or state agencies. The difference in logic has important public health, safety, or economic consequences. Behavioral vaccines aim at total population-level changes in mortality and morbidity. A typical prevention program aims at increasing protective factors or decreasing risk factors for a group ~all children say at a particular school, which may be called “universal,” but is not all children in the total community, state, or nation! or aims at a smaller subset of people in a school or social unit ~targeted or selected approach in current jargon!. Most prevention programs, even if well grounded in exemplary research, do not meet the definitions of behavioral vaccines—generally because of cost, complexity, and0or poor potential for comprehensive reach. A behavioral vaccine is, above all else, simple. In everyday language, most people call a behavioral vaccine a cultural practice. Prevention programs have grave difficulties becoming cultural practices. Even the most research-based prevention programs, like Botvin’s LifeSkills, have not become cultural practices. Why is this so? One significant reason is that programs “swim against the current” of selections by consequences and related adaptive principles. Most cultural practices are adopted because of an interlocking series of self-sustaining consequences and antecedent conditions. A cultural practice is almost immediately discernable and can be imitated quickly, even if not perfectly. Furthermore, the cultural practice typically produces immediate results—typically positive reinforcement from others, escape from social approbation,
  • 7. Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines • 581 and0or some other kind of advantage. For example, using good manners—a cultural practice that social scientists might call “social skills”—typically evokes many layers of reinforcement or advantage in many settings. Alternatively, being a really skilled “bad boy” in a rough-and-tumble chaotic neighborhood likewise produces many layers of immediate reinforcement or advantage. Both of these examples are cultural practices with different topographies selected by the consequences in their settings. Expecting any “prevention programs” to become a cultural practice is doomed for some obvious yet very profound reasons: 1. Most prevention programs fail to produce immediately discernable advantage, benefit, or results, and, therefore, immediate intrinsic or extrinsic reinforce- ment will be very weak. Without such feedback, behavior will soon decay. Other behaviors that do get more immediate feedback or reinforcement will be selected for in the environment, weakening the prevention program efforts. 2. Proprietary issues ~e.g., trademarks, copyrights, understandable business con- cerns! can work against a widespread diffusion of a cultural practice ~although can expand diffusion, too!. Effective prevention programs take a great deal of capital to develop, test, and diffuse. If people could spontaneously adopt the prevention program and use it, then the results would be catastrophic for most developers. Thus, under current consequences of prevention funding, extreme disincentives exist for disclosing evidence-based kernels inside “best practice” programs. These behaviors are not bad; they are rational in an economic sense. 3. Basic social marketing issues also impinge on issues of prevention programs versus cultural practices. Social marketing uses what are called the 4 Ps, which are: the conception of a Product, Price, distribution ~Place!, and Promotion. The price of prevention best practice products presently is too high for schools— typically between $10,000 to $50,000 per year, which means the buyer can only be at a school-wide or district level—never “purchased” by a teacher or indi- vidual staff member. The place of distribution of best practices is not conve- nient. One can only obtain best practices from specialty suppliers, which requires bids or other complicated processes. One cannot buy effective prevention at convenient retail outlets. Promotion of evidence-based prevention products that can be adopted easily is virtually nonexistent. When was the last time the reader saw or heard a slick TV, radio, or newsprint ad for a prevention program in local media? For potential behavioral vaccines or behavioral kernels to become cultural prac- tices that might help prevent serious social problems, such behavioral vaccines or behavioral kernels would have to meet some rather stringent criteria. They would have to be: 1. low or no cost, 2. produce immediate benefit, 3. easy to explain, imitate, and generalize, 4. meet or solve other competing demands, 5. easily socially marketed, and 6. change key prevention principles—behavior- and0or antecedent-related risk and protective factors ~e.g., Hawkins, Catalano, & Miller, 1992!.
  • 8. 582 • Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004 Is it possible that the six criteria for behavioral vaccines and behavioral kernels can be met for powerful prevention? Yes. In some cases, strong or better evidence exists for some behavioral vaccines or behavioral kernels than “best practice” pro- grams on various government department lists. Often, many candidate behavioral vaccines or behavioral kernels actually are embedded as active ingredients in named prevention programs. Behavioral Kernels or Vaccines for Classrooms and Families From the 1960s to the present, substantial research has been conducted on effective teaching and schools. Investigators have used a variety of research methods to capture differences in effective classrooms and schools—from direct observation, to archival records, to surveys. Some studies have been cross-sectional, some have been longitu- dinal, and some have been true experiments. Examples of some of those studies were cited earlier ~e.g., Abbott, O’Donnell, Hawkins, Hill, Kosterman, & Catalano, 1998; Embry et al., 1996; Flannery et al., 2003; Gottfredson, 1986; Mayer et al., 1983!. What is extraordinary is that many of these efforts contain similar components, which may have different names for the same thing ~e.g., fuzzy grams versus praise notes; quiet signal versus the peace sign!. In general, these procedures increase the density of positive reinforcement from peers and adults, reduce negative attention, change the environment to reduce negative behaviors, etc. Is there an experimental literature of the active ingredients? Yes, although it is not well known outside program developers or not understood as evidence based by consumers. What also is useful to know is that many of those same active ingredients exist in effective parenting programs. A number of potential evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines are presented in the Tables 2 and 3 that have usefulness for classrooms and0or homes, as well as commu- nity contexts such as after-school programs and day-care centers. Evidence-Based Behavioral Kernels or Vaccines for Community Settings Negative or positive parent–child behavior related to prediction of life-time adverse child-development outcomes can be observed easily and countered easily in public places such as restaurants, grocery stores, waiting rooms, etc. ~Langer, Rieckhof, Stein- bach, & Tausch, 1973! or outside while monitoring and managing children’s play ~e.g., Embry & Malfetti, 1980!. Harsh handling, scolding, or hitting of infants and toddlers who are fearful can be commonly observed and coded by observers in shopping centers, malls, grocery stores, and other public places ~e.g., Honig, 1994!. The prob- ability of when and where parents and children will have difficulties during shopping trips in types of interactions that predict life problems can be observed and predicted ~e.g., Sanders, & Hunter, 1984!. Parent–teen and teen–peer interactions can be coded reliably in stores and shopping malls and show differences by the children’s ages ~Montemayor & Flannery, 1989!. Many of the evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines for school and home can be used in community settings. For example, response cost and class-wide peer tutoring can be applied to after-school programs. The Good Behavior Game can be used for various team sports or after-school activities, and Beat the Timer can be used in virtually every community group activity for children.
  • 9. Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines • 583 Table 2. Example Evidence-Based Behavior Kernels Kernel Title Description Evidence Citation Examples Beat the timer ~k! Use small timers to reduce allocated time Adams & Drabman, 1995 for task. Powerful effects for reducing Drabman & Creedon, 1979 negative behaviors. Available at most Wolfe, Kelly, & Drabman, 1981 discount stores. Response cost ~k! Removal of token, money, or privilege Forman, 1980 for misbehavior w0o emotional displays. Kendall & Finch, 1976 Works as well as stimulant medication Little & Kelley, 1989 for children with Attention Deficit Reynolds & Kelley, 1997 Hyperactivity Disorder. Easily adapted at home. Mystery motivators ~k! Random rewards using a simple, Brown & Redmon, 1989 lottery-like system for behaviors. Very Foxx & Schaeffer, 1981 powerful in changing child behaviors Moore et al., 1994 at home & school, parent behavior, and work-related behaviors. Nonverbal transition Nonverbal ~visual, kinesthetic, and Abbott et al., 1998 cues ~k! auditory! cues for transitions ~stopping Embry et al., 1996 one task & starting another!, changing Krantz & Risley, 1977 voice registers, getting quiet to hear Rosenkoetter & Fowler, 1986 instruction that are used school wide. Meaningful roles ~ jobs! ~k! Providing responsible roles to all Kahne & Bailey, 1999 children in the classroom, school, or Rutter, 1983 home increases prosocial behaviors, instructional time, and achievement, and provides positive adult and peer reinforcement & recognition. Response cards0slates ~k! True or false, multiple choice, open Armendariz & Umbreit, 1999 response, etc. cards0slates substantially Gardner, Howard, & Grossi, improve participation, reduce 1994 disruptions, raise weekly tests scores, Skinner, Fletcher, & improve standardized achievement and Henington, 1996 allow for more feedback, praise, and recognition. Can be used at home. “Tootle”0compliment0 Tootles ~opposite of tattles! are written Abbott et al., 1998 praise note ~k! compliment notes that are publicly Embry et al., 1996 posted. Effective in improving social Gottfredson, 1986 competence, school adjustment, and Skinner et al., 2002 reducing problem behaviors. Positive school-to-home Positive notes from school staff to home Blechman, Taylor, & Schrader, notes ~k! and from home to school help bridge 1981 behavior and contingencies, unite adults, Kelley & McCain, 1995 foster positive family attention to child, and reduce negative0harsh interactions. Some procedures are unique to community settings. Recall that parent–child behavior typically degrades in restaurants. Traditional place mats for family restau- rants typically feature a sampling of games ~e.g., riddles, matching tasks, tic-tac-toe!, while table-talk place mats provide conversational topics and illustrated games in
  • 10. 584 • Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004 Table 3. Example Evidence-Based Behavioral Vaccines Vaccine Title Description Evidence Citation Examples Structured0Organized Structured recess games that emphasize Jarrett et al., 1998 recess ~v! turn taking, helpfulness, rule following, Lewis, Powers, Kelk, & and emotion control dramatically improve Newcomer, 2002 cooperative behavior, decrease bullying & Murphy, Hutchison, & Bailey, aggression, improve social norms, better 1984 character, improve academic learning Pellegrini & Davis, 1993 during the day, and reduces Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and other disturbances. Reduces obesity or BMI. Good behavior game ~v! A team-based, response-cost protocol for Embry, 2002 groups of children that rewards inhibition of inattentive, disruptive, and aggressive0bullying. Documented in approximately 30 studies to reduce short-term and long-term behavior problems as well as DSM-IV Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, and conduct problems, special-education placement plus substance abuse0initiation. Can be implemented from simple presentations or manuals. Class wide peer tutoring ~v! A team-based classroom procedure Greenwood, 1991 involving rapid-paced learning for Greenwood et al., 1993 spelling0vocabulary, math, & reading that improves behavior, increases standardized achievement, and reduces special-education placement. CWPT uses all of the kernels listed in this chart. Class is split into teams. Teams are split into pairs who work together 3– 4 times a week on rapid-fire practice. Points are calculated, announced, and posted, followed by some recognition and occasional team reward. CWPT can be implemented from simple presentations or manuals, producing observable gains in a week. Special play ~v! Utilizes 15 minutes of special play with McDonald & Sayger, 1998 simple things ~blocks, buttons, pipe Webster-Straaton, 1998 cleaners, blocks, scraps, junk! by the child in which an adult follows the lead of the child. Improves warmth and compliance while reducing aggression and agitation. which the entire family can participate. In controlled studies ~e.g., Green, Hardison, & Greene, 1984!, table-talk place mats resulted in more social and educational dialog among family members than either traditional place mat or no-material conditions. Table-talk place mats also reduced parental coercive comments and children’s distrac- tion comments. Table-talk place mats could be printed in bulk and changed each
  • 11. Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines • 585 week or month as a community-based kernel intervention. Behavior change could even be measured. Grocery stores are places where parent–child behavior deteriorates. It turns out that simple advice packages, distributed to parents, observably changed parent–child interactions for the better while shopping ~e.g., Clark, Greene, Macrae, McNees, Davis, & Risley, 1977; Ergon-Rowe, Ichinose, & Clark, 1991!. In studies of preschoolers, my co-workers and I have been able to change parent–hild behavior while shopping using specially designed shopping bags, distributed in the store, that have sticker charts for the child. Based on marketing research ~e.g., Rust, 1993!, positive behaviors can be cued by signs in the aisles or on the floors of the store. Community distribution of evidence-based practices on child rearing could happen in the places where problem- atic behavior occurs, such as grocery stores, video rental stores, toy stores, discount stores, and shopping malls. Parenting behavior can be improved in those settings using kernels of evidence-based practices. With the exception of safety research and environmental issues ~e.g., DePasquale & Geller, 1999; Geller, 1973!, there is very little extant research on the diffusion of behavioral vaccines and evidence-based kernels. This lack is probably driven by the metaphor of therapy and school that has driven much of prevention science, each of which have an implicit culture that demands lessons or sessions. Kernels and behav- ioral vaccines are fundamentally daily habits or routines, not curriculum or therapy models, and thereby have tended to be ignored or overlooked. Behavioral vaccines and kernels also can be metaphorically like a product, which marketed as easily as something in a grocery store, discount store, via mail-order, or instead through in-service training or a continuing-education model. SOCIAL MARKETING OF BEHAVIORAL KERNELS AND VACCINES Evidence-based behavioral kernels and vaccines lend themselves to powerful models of social marketing in ways that traditional approaches to prevention, intervention, and treatment cannot be. For example, “Tootle notes” or “Beat the Timer” can be positively and quite easily promoted in a community: • “Does someone you know feel under appreciated? Pick up a package of ‘Tootle Notes’ today at any participating grocery store.” • “Do you know a child who dawdles, delays, and gets distracted? Pick up a ‘Beat the Timer’ kit at the child’s school, most pediatricians offices, or local drug stores.” Social Marketing makes use of the “Five Ps of Marketing.” The modern approach to marketing revolves around five Ps: product, performance, price, place, and promotion.1 Product: Commercial marketers make sure that their product is appealing to con- sumers and has a catchy name that is easy to remember. “Tootle Notes” or “Beat the Timer” are examples of catchy names. Performance: Commercial marketers make clear what the customer must do to achieve the advertised result and what the benefits are from the product. 1 Traditional papers on social marketing list only four, and this paper adds another based on prior experi- ence in the field.
  • 12. 586 • Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004 “Awareness” is not performance, which must be measurable and reportable. Kernels and vaccines make performance promises of benefit such as “learn more,” “have less stress,” “saves time,” or “feel better.” The actions to achieve performance can be quite simple in the case of kernels or vaccines, such as “use response slates 20 minutes per day” or “use class-wide peer tutoring for 20–25 minutes per day, 3 or 4 times per week.” Place: Kernels and behavioral vaccines can be easily accessible to virtually all poten- tial consumers, unlike most prevention programs that are only available through specialty catalogues, training, certification, etc. All you have to do to get “Tootle Notes” or “Beat the Timer” and other kernels or behavioral vaccines is visit a local school, merchant, ask your doctor, or perhaps call a toll-free number. Price: Indicated or selected prevention programs or treatment protocols may cost thousands of dollars to start up or use. Some evidence-based kernels, how- ever, can be given away as sponsored premiums, such as “Tootle Notes spon- sored by XYZ Realty.” Others cost a few dollars at most. Behavioral vaccines may be somewhat more expensive, perhaps a $50 to $500 for a group of children. Price also can be in time or effort, such as “takes only a few min- utes a day.” Promotion: Commercial marketers use promotion and advertising to familiarize consumers with the product and persuade them to buy it or try it. This enables the full power of advertising and marketing to operate for community- based prevention. The current crop of widely listed best practices do not lend themselves to this type of promotion, largely because the “buyers” are highly institutionalized—school districts, state government, etc. Evidence-based pre- vention kernels or behavioral vaccines can be adopted or purchased by a single user—a child, a teacher, a parent, etc. Kernels and vaccines can be sold in normal commercial settings like grocery stores and discount stores. Unfor- tunately, one cannot even order an evidence-based prevention program ~“every- thing you need, just add water”! from Amazon.com. There are some other issues to consider about the social marketing of evidence- based kernels and behavioral vaccines that may not be transparent. First, they invite huge possibilities for sponsorships from the private sector using marketing and adver- tising revenue rather than charitable gift giving. From my own personal experience in this country and overseas, I have been able to recruit major sponsorships from multi- national corporations to do this kind of focused, positive, and population-based pre- vention. Second, the entire nature of evidence-based kernels and vaccines invites partnerships. Many people can play at the same thing, which moves prevention much closer to a culture and norms change. Third, the impact of evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines are observable and measurable using very simple procedures. Most of the kernels and behavioral vaccines come from a robust history of applied behavior analysis that insisted upon very high standards of measurement. In the case of kernels like response slates, nonverbal cues, cooperative games during recess, or behavioral vaccines like the Good Behavior Game or Class-wide Peer Tutoring, the impact on behavior is evident and measurable immediately, or within days. These observable effects greatly help in community self-efficacy and coalition building. Fourth, kernels and vaccines can be used as real examples for “cause marketing” for complicated
  • 13. Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines • 587 concepts like early childhood education, educational reform, or community violence prevention. Social norms commonly are described as determining much of multiproblem behavior in youth. Norms are about daily behaviors, routines, and rituals rather than attitudes. When confronted with prevention in the past, most “social marketing” efforts have focused on the general issue or the “don’t” behaviors ~e.g., don’t do domestic violence or child abuse!. Offering a menu of 30 prevention programs for schools or stakeholders to choose from, like the prevention fair, cannot alter the community norms because there are no common daily behaviors, routines, rituals, or language that share any stimulus properties that would cue rule-governed behaviors that make up the core of “community norms.” Community norms require some kind of identity or unifying concept. Good social marketing campaigns promote a product or products and a brand identity because the brand identity “leads” people to other products based on the performance and benefits from the first success. In the case of evidence- based behavioral kernels and vaccines, my colleagues and I have started using the phrase, “The Simple Gifts Initiative” or “Simple Gifts for Our Children” because the benefits and ease of use need to be conveyed as distinct from standard prevention programs or campaigns. The use of evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines with a brand identity used in social marketing can create a shift in community norm—in actual behavior. LIMITATIONS OF THIS STUDY AND CONCEPT Increasingly, various entities such as the National Institute of Health and the Society for Prevention Research have called for some alternative to evidence-based programs, suggesting, perhaps, the use of principles of effective prevention. Schools and com- munity groups have voiced some dissatisfaction for the “canned program” approach. Evidence-based behavioral kernels and vaccines that measurably effect risk and pro- tective factors add greater precision to issues of adoption, dose, and fidelity than very broad principles such as “refusal skills” or “interactive instruction.” The behavioral kernels and vaccines described herein are quite discrete. They can be precisely oper- ationalized, which is part of their charm. Their short-term effects are easily measured, and their long-term effects have been established. Notwithstanding these advantages, this article does not address other issues required for full-fledged community- or state-level approach—mostly for reasons of space and focus. Remaining issues that must be addressed include, but are not limited to: 1. how to calculate an optimum mix of behavioral kernels and vaccines for cost- effective results; 2. how to create a data dashboard for monitoring both implementation and outcomes; 3. how to construct evaluation protocols for such strategies; and 4. how this approach would integrate or augment existing investments in more complex evidence-based programs. This article does not address an important next step in the overall construct of the theory of behavioral kernels and vaccines. The theory lends itself to the construction of a very precise formal language of prevention, just as genetic researchers have a
  • 14. 588 • Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004 precise language of the polymorphism or alleles of genes. For example, each kernel can be given a unique classification code ~e.g., BT beat the timer!; its allele or variation can be coded such as BTR ~Beat the timer with reward! or BTRC ~Beat the timer with response cost for failure!. Dose, intensity, frequency, or other factors can be precisely coded by abbreviation, such as BTRC~2 pd! to indicate two times per day. This formal language of prevention would allow for far greater precision in under- standing what works and what does not, as well as for replication. Amusingly, there is a precise, formal language for tying fishing flies, understood by any serious fly-fisher who can copy the instruction—yet no formal recipe language for prevention research or practice. For the developers of prevention programs who always have potential economic interests, the downside would be full disclosure of active ingredients—which is required anyway in the course of therapeutic medical research. Some organization such as the Society for Prevention Research could substantially further the science of prevention by developing a common set of notations for behavioral kernels and vaccines, so that principle-driven prevention versus trademarked program prevention could be better developed and studied. SUMMARY The use of best practice prevention programs and intuitively appealing community coalition processes have generally failed, so far, to yield population-level effects despite the funds allocated and regulations to promote them. This article introduces a ratio- nal alternative: promotion of evidence-based behavioral kernels and vaccines that have a chance of becoming cultural practices—with community-level effects on vari- ous multiproblems like substance abuse, delinquency, violence, or school failure. Evidence-based kernels are irreducible units of behavior-change technology that pro- duce an observable, reliable result. Evidence-based kernels are what compose most of the named best practices for prevention. What is not widely known is that the evidence- based kernels are powerful in their own right. Behavioral vaccines are essentially several kernels put together for daily use with powerful longitudinal results. Substan- tial evidence exists showing that behavioral kernels and vaccines can affect major risk or protective factors or prevention principles. Because of the simplicity of kernels and behavioral vaccines, they can be promoted easily across whole communities or states, producing measurable changes that can be documented via time-series designs, in real world circumstances. Widespread propagation of evidence-based kernels and behav- ioral vaccines could have significant impact on communities, providing a low-cost alternative and practical model for community psychology, public health, and policy makers. Evidence-based kernels and behavioral vaccines represent simple gifts for the future of our children that can change community norms about prevention of serious problems like substance abuse and violence. REFERENCES Abbott, R.D., O’Donnell, J., Hawkins, J.D., Hill, K.G., Kosterman, R., & Catalano, R.F. ~1998!. Changing teaching practices to promote achievement and bonding to school. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 68, 542– 552. Adams, C.D., & Drabman, R.S. ~1995!. Improving morning interactions: Beat-the-Buzzer with a boy having multiple handicaps. Child & Family Behavior Therapy. 17, 13–26.
  • 15. Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines • 589 Armendariz, F., & Umbreit, J. ~1999!. Using active responding to reduce disruptive behavior in a general education classroom. Journal of Positive Behavior Interventions, 1, 152–158. Biglan, A., Henderson, J.M., Humphreys, D., Yasui, M., Whisman, R., Black, C., & James, L. ~1995!. Mobilizing positive reinforcement to reduce youth access to tobacco. Tobacco Con- trol, 4, 42– 48. Blechman, E.A., Taylor, C.J., & Schrader, S.M. ~1981!. Family problem solving versus home notes as early intervention with high-risk children. Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology, 49, 919–926. Brown, N., & Redmon, W.K. ~1989!. The effects of a group reinforcement contingency on staff use of unscheduled sick leave. Journal of Organizational Behavior Management, 10, 3–17. Clark, H.B., Greene, B.F., Macrae, J.W., McNees, M.P., Davis, J.L., & Risley, T.R. ~1977!. A parent advice package for family shopping trips: Development and evaluation. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 10, 605– 624. DePasquale, J.P., & Geller, E.S. ~1999!. Critical success factors for behavior-based safety: A study of twenty industry-wide applications. Journal of Safety Research, 30, 237–249. Drabman, R.S., & Creedon, D.L. ~1979!. Beat the buzzer. Child Behavior Therapy, 1, 295–296. Embry, D.D. ~2002!. The good behavior game: A best practice candidate as a universal behav- ioral vaccine. Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review, 5~4!, 273–297. Embry, D.D., Flannery, D., Vazsonyi, A., Powell, K., & Atha, H. ~1996!. PeaceBuilders: A theo- retically driven, school-based model for early violence prevention. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 12, 91–100. Embry, D.D., & Malfetti, J.M. ~1980!. Reducing the risk of pedestrian accidents to preschoolers by parent training and symbolic modeling for children: An experimental analysis in the natural environment. Falls Church, VA: AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety. Ergon-Rowe, E., Ichinose, C.K., & Clark, H.B. ~1991!. Dissemination of self-help information for families: An evaluation of parent use of three child-rearing advice booklets. Child & Family Behavior Therapy, 13, 59–73. Fawcett, S.B., Lewis, R.K., Paine-Andrews, A., Francisco, V.T., Richter, K.P., Williams, E.L., & Copple, B. ~1997!. Evaluating community coalitions for prevention of substance abuse: The case of Project Freedom. Health Education & Behavior, 24~6!, 812–828. Flannery, D.J., Vazsonyi, A.T., Liau, A.K., Guo, S., Powell, K.E., Atha, H., Vesterdal, W., & Embry, D. ~2003!. Initial behavior outcomes for the PeaceBuilders universal school based violence prevention program. Developmental Psychology, 39, 292–308. Forman, S.G. ~1980!. A comparison of cognitive training and response cost procedures in mod- ifying aggressive behavior of elementary school children. Behavior Therapy, 11, 594 – 600. Foxx, R.M., & Schaeffer, M.H. ~1981!. A company-based lottery to reduce the personal driving of employees. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 14, 273–285. Gardner, R., Heward, W.L., & Grossi, T.A. ~1994!. Effects of response cards on student partici- pation and academic achievement: A systematic replication with inner-city students during whole-class science instruction. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 27, 63–71. Geller, E.S. ~1973!. Prompting anti-litter behaviors. In Proceedings of the Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association ~pp. 907–908!. Washington, DC: American Psycho- logical Association. Gottfredson, D.C. ~1986!. An empirical test of school-based environmental and individual inter- ventions to reduce the risk of delinquent behavior. Criminology 24, 705–731. Gottfredson, D.C., Gottfredson, G.D., & Hybl, L.G. ~1993!. Managing adolescent behavior: A multiyear, multischool study. American Educational Research Journal, 30, 179–215. Green, R.B., Hardison, W.L., & Greene, B.F. ~1984!. Turning the table on advice programs for parents: Using placemats to enhance family interaction at restaurants. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 17, 497– 508.
  • 16. 590 • Journal of Community Psychology, September 2004 Greenwood, C.R. ~1991!. Classwide peer tutoring: Longitudinal effects on the reading, language, and mathematics achievement of at-risk students. Journal of Reading, Writing & Learning Disabilities International, 7, 105–123. Greenwood, C.R., Terry, B., Utley, C.A., Montagna, D., & Walker, D. ~1993!. Achievement, placement, and services: Middle school benefits of classwide peer tutoring used at the elementary school. School Psychology Review, 22, 497– 516. Hallfors, D., & Godette, D. ~2002!. Will the ‘Principles of Effectiveness’ improve prevention practice? Early findings from a diffusion study. Health Education Research, 17, 461– 470. Hallfors, D., Hyunsan, C., Livert, D., & Kadushin, C. ~2000!. Fighting back against substance abuse: Are community coalitions winning? American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 23~4!, 237–324. Hawkins, J.D., Catalano, R.F., & Miller, J.Y. ~1992!. Risk and protective factors for alcohol and other drug problems in adolescence and early adulthood: Implications for substance abuse prevention. Psychological Bulletin, 112 ~1!, 64 –105. Honig, A.S. ~1994!. Comforting babies in public spaces. Early Child Development & Care, 97, 165–173. Jarrett, O.S., Maxwell, D.M., Dickerson, C., Hoge, P., Davies, G., & Yetley, A. ~1998!. Impact of recess on classroom behavior: Group effects and individual differences. The Journal of Educational Research, 92~2!, 121–126. Jones, F.H., Fremouw, W., & Carples, S. ~1977!. Pyramid training of elementary school teachers to use a classroom management “skill package.” Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 10, 239–253. Kahne, J., & Bailey, K. ~1999!. The role of social capital in youth development: The case of “I Have a Dream” programs. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 21, 321–343. Kelley, M.L., & McCain, A.P. ~1995!. Promoting academic performance in inattentive children: The relative efficacy of school-home notes with and without response cost. Behavior Mod- ification, 19, 357–375. Kendall, P.C., & Finch, A.J. ~1976!. A cognitive-behavioral treatment for impulse control: A case study. Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology, 44, 852–857. Krantz, P.J., & Risley, T.R. ~1972!. The organization of group care environments: Behavioral ecology in the classroom. Retrieved from http:00www.eduref.org Langer, I., Rieckhof, A., Steinbach, I., & Tausch, A.M. ~1973!. Mother–child interactions outside their homes. Psychologie in Erziehung und Unterricht, 20, 361–376. Lewis, R.K., Paine-Andrews, A., Fawcett, S.B., Francisco, V.T., Richter, K.P., Copple, B., & Cop- ple, J.E. ~1996!. Evaluating the effects of a community coalition’s efforts to reduce illegal sales of alcohol and tobacco products to minors. Journal of Community Health, 21~6!, 429– 436. Lewis, T.J., Powers, L.J., Kelk, M.J., & Newcomer, L.L. ~2002!. Reducing problem behaviors on the playground: An investigation of the application of school-wide positive behavior sup- ports. Psychology in the Schools, 39, 181–190. Little, L.M., & Kelley, M.L. ~1989!. The efficacy of response cost procedures for reducing children’s noncompliance to parental instructions. Behavior Therapy, 20, 525– 534. Madsen, C.H., Jr., Becker, W.C., & Thomas, D.R. ~1968!. Rules, praise, and ignoring: Elements of elementary classroom control. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1, 139–150. Mayer, G.R., & Butterworth, T.W. ~1979!. A preventive approach to school violence and vandal- ism: An experimental study. Personnel and Guidance Journal, 57, 436 – 441. Mayer, G.R., Butterworth, T.W., Nafpaktitis, M., & Sulzer-Azaroff, B. ~1983!. Preventing school vandalism and improving discipline: A three-year study. Journal of Applied Behavior Analy- sis, 16, 355–369. McDonald, L., & Sayger, T. ~1998!. Impact of a family and school based prevention program on protective factors for high risk youth. Drugs and Society 12, 61–85.
  • 17. Behavioral Kernels and Behavior Vaccines • 591 Modzeleski, W. ~2003, October 9!. Safe and drug-free schools program. In Daniel J. Flannery ~Director!, Violence prevention symposium. Symposium conducted at the meeting of the Institute for the Study and Prevention of Violence, Kent State University, Kent, OH. Montemayor, R., & Flannery, D.J. ~1989!. A naturalistic study of the involvement of children and adolescents with their mothers and friends: Developmental differences in expressive behav- ior. Journal of Adolescent Research, 4, 3–14. Moore, L.A., Waguespack, A.M., Wickstrom, K.F., Witt, J.C., & Gaydon, G.R. ~1994!. Mystery motivator: An effective and time efficient intervention. School Psychology Review, 23, 106 –117. Murphy, H.A., Hutchison, J.M., & Bailey, J.S. ~1983!. Behavioral school psychology goes out- doors: The effect of organized games on playground aggression. Journal of Applied Behav- ior Analysis, 16, 29–35. O’Donnell, J., Hawkins, J.D., Abbott, R.D., & Day, L.E. ~1995!. Preventing school failure, drug use, and delinquency among low-income children: Long-term intervention in elementary schools. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 65~1!, 87–100. Paine-Andrews, A., Fawcett, S.B., Richter, K.P., Berkley, J.Y., Williams, E.L., & Lopez, C.M. ~1996!. Community coalitions to prevent adolescent substance abuse: The case of the “Project Freedom: Replication initiative. Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Community, 14, 81–99. Pellegrini, A.D., & Davis, P.D. ~1993!. Relations between children’s playground and classroom behavior. British Journal of Educational Psychology, 63, 88–95. Reynolds, L.K., & Kelley, M.L. ~1997!. The efficacy of a response cost-based treatment package for managing aggressive behavior in preschoolers. Behavior Modification, 21, 216 –230. Rosenkoetter, S.E., & Fowler, S.A. ~1986!. Teaching mainstreamed children to manage daily transitions. Teaching Exceptional Children, 19, 20–23. Rust, L. ~1993!. Parents and children shopping together: A new approach to qualitative analysis of observational data. Journal of Advertising Research, 33, 65–70. Rutter, M. ~1983!. School effects on pupil progress: Research findings and policy implications. Child Development, 54, 1–29. Sanders, M.R., & Hunter, A.C. ~1984!. An ecological analysis of children’s behaviour in super- markets. Australian Journal of Psychology, 36, 415– 427. Secker-Walker, R.H., Gnich, W., Platt, S., & Lancaster, T. ~2002!. Community interventions for reducing smoking among adults. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, ~3!, CD001745. Silvia, E.S., & Thorne, J. ~1997!. School-based drug prevention programs: A longitudinal study in selected school districts ~executive summary!. Research Triangle Park, NC: Research Triangle Institute. Skinner, C.H., Fletcher, P.A., & Henington, C. ~1996!. Increasing learning rates by increasing student response rates: A summary of research. School Psychology Quarterly, 11, 313–325. Skinner, C.H., Neddenriep, C.E., Robinson, S.L., Ervin, R., & Jones, K. ~2002!. Altering educa- tional environments through positive peer reporting: Prevention and remediation of social problems associated with behavior disorders. Psychology in the Schools, 39, 191–202. Sugai, G., Horner, R.H., Dunlap, G., Hieneman, M., Lewis, T.J., Nelson, C.M., Scott, T., Liaupsin, C., Sailor, W., Turnbull, A.P., Turnbull, H.R., Wickham, D., Wilcox, B., & Ruef, M. ~2000!. Applying positive behavior support and functional behavioral assessment in schools. Jour- nal of Positive Behavior Interventions, 2, 131–143. Webster-Stratton, C. ~1998!. Preventing conduct problems in head start children: Strengthening parenting competencies. Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology, 66, 715–730. Wolfe, D.A., Kelly, J.A., & Drabman, R.S. ~1981!. “Beat the Buzzer”: A method for training an abusive mother to decrease recurrent child conflicts. Journal of Clinical Child Psychology, 10, 114 –116.