[JournalMast"]
["Nosmokinglogo"]
Mobilizing Peer Support for Tobacco Reduction

PROJECT SUMMARY
With over a billion cigarettes smoked each year by Canadian youth, it is imperative that substantial efforts be made to prevent and reduce the use of tobacco. Peer Resources with the assistance of Health Canada has initiated a project to mobilize peer support for tobacco reduction. The project includes five components: a foundation paper on mobilizing peer support; a peer helper workbook for tobacco reduction strategies; the development of tobacco reduction resources available through the internet; the distribution of an issue of the Peer Counsellor Journal; and the creation of a network of peer programs associated with comprehensive health education.

The summary and table of contents of the foundation paper are detailed below and a copy of the full paper is available online to members of the Peer Resources Network at: http://www.peer.ca/Passaccess.html. (Password access is required.)

FOUNDATION PAPER SUMMARY
This paper stresses the role that peer helpers can provide in the delivery of smoking reduction and prevention strategies. The author, Rey Carr, a recognized international authority on peer programs and prevention, suggests that successful reduction strategies must:

  1. recognize the limits of traditional approaches;
  2. integrate smoking prevention into a comprehensive health curriculum;
  3. base reduction and prevention strategies on adolescent needs, perceptions, and beliefs, particularly their social and experiential life; and
  4. use peer helping principles which have been derived from empirical standards and practices.
Practical suggestions are provided as to how to integrate these principles into program delivery activities, and resources for further program development are provided.

TABLE OF CONTENTS OF THE FOUNDATION PAPER