PRIME For Life is available for youth and adult audiences to help them understand their risk for experiencing alcohol or drug problems throughout life. PRIME For Life can be taught as a prevention program for virtually any group.
"However, unlike many other drug or alcohol programs, PRIME For Life has been specifically designed for groups that typically make high-risk choices."
However, unlike many other drug or alcohol programs, PRIME For Life has been specifically designed for groups that typically make high-risk choices. This may include impaired driving offenders, college students, or young people charged with alcohol or drug offenses.
PRIME For Life includes prevention and intervention content. Universal audiences—those without any known increased risk factors—may need only the risk reduction information provided in the prevention component, though many universal audiences benefit from participating in both the prevention and intervention course. This is also true of most selective audiences—those whose members may have increased risk for problems. Indicated groups—those whose members may already be exhibiting signs of problems—benefit from a more intensive version of PRIME For Life. For example, youth in juvenile justice facilities and DUI offenders often receive 20 to 24 hours of “therapeutic education” that includes more activities and reflection.
PRIME For Life serves universal, selective, or indicated audiences, and options are available for each.
PRIME For Life is delivered to people convicted of driving under the influence (DUI) of alcohol or other drugs. The program is used statewide for impaired drivers in Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine, North Carolina, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and Utah. It is one of several programs that may be used in many states.
PRIME For Life is delivered throughout the country to youth ages 13 to 20 who already engage in high-risk drinking or drug use or who are in a group likely to begin making choices that increase risk for problems. Thousands of young people throughout the country are taught the curriculum through juvenile justice systems, underage DUI programs, court diversion, school student assistance, and similar programs. The program is taught system wide in South Dakota, Maine, Hawaii, Alaska and Kentucky. Some schools teach the curriculum in the middle or high school setting.
PRIME For Life is used with adults in many settings, from court-ordered audiences to the workplace or places of worship. The Georgia Department of Corrections uses PRIME For Life systemwide.
PRIME For Life is the standardized, world-wide substance abuse program for policy violators, command referrals, and self-referrals to the Alcohol and other Drug Abuse Prevention Training (ADAPT). The final decision followed a several year process in which the Army thoroughly examined available programs and conducted an evaluation of PRIME For Life with soldiers.
The Swedish Prison and Probation Service have implemented PRIME For Life nationwide after an extensive review by an accreditation panel made up of independent experts and researchers. PRIME For Life is also used in Sweden by the Swedish military.
With the supplementary parent materials, parents not only learn information to reduce the risk that their children will experience any type of alcohol-related problem over their lifetime, but also learn how to communicate this information. The program is used with parents whose children are participating in court diversion or juvenile justice program.
PRIME For Life is delivered on college campuses. The program is often taught to students who have violated campus alcohol or drug policies, through freshmen health classes or through athletic departments.
Used statewide in Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine, North Carolina, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and Utah.