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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05206994
Other study ID # 201920S
Secondary ID
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date October 4, 2021
Est. completion date September 30, 2025

Study information

Verified date May 2024
Source University of California, San Diego
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Investigators propose to rigorously evaluate the Close to Home (C2H) model via a cluster-matched control trial across 18 diverse communities (9 C2H, 9 control) in California via collection and analyses of social network, school-based and social media data. Close to Home is a primary prevention community mobilization model implemented in 10 communities across California that engages community members across multiple sectors and social networks to strengthen community connections and shift social norms regarding sexual violence (SV), but has never been rigorously evaluated. C2H moves beyond criminal justice, lobbying, or school-based curricular approaches, taking a true community-level and community-led approach. This is a five-year project, funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for 3 years with competitive awards for years 4 and 5, and is conducted in partnership with the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) and ValorUs (formerly CALCASA). The University of California, San Diego (UCSD) and CDPH partnership is uniquely poised to conduct the first rigorous evaluation of C2H in California at this time.


Description:

Investigators propose to rigorously evaluate the Close to Home (C2H) model via a cluster-matched control trial across 18 diverse communities (9 C2H, 9 control) in California via collection and analyses of social network, school-based and social media data. Analyses of these data will provide evidence at the individual, interpersonal and community levels of the effectiveness of this community mobilization approach to reduce sexual violence (SV) incidence. California is uniquely poised to conduct this research, given a) the multiple, diverse of communities implementing C2H; b) California Department of Public Health (CDPH)'s 10-year commitment to building capacity to support local implementation of this model, and c) CDPH's ongoing partnership on RPE evaluation with University of California San Diego's Center on Gender Equity and Health, a center with the highest levels of expertise in evaluation of SV prevention programs, and the science of social norms, social networks and social media. A Research Advisory Board will be engaged and inform and guide these efforts throughout the project period. Investigators will accomplish this highly innovative effort via the following aims: AIM 1. Develop and implement a cluster-matched control design in partnership with the RAB, including collecting baseline social network, school-based and social media data across 14 diverse California communities. Hypothesis 1.1: Analyses of baseline social network data will demonstrate pathways of influence regarding SV social norms and behaviors among male and female youth ages 14-24 years. Hypothesis 1.2: Analyses of triangulated YouGov and Twitter data will yield a valid, feasible social media-based assessment of SV social norms at the community-level for evaluation of SV prevention efforts. AIM 2: Evaluate effects of the C2H model on SV social norms and incidence, as well as patterns of diffusion of these effects, via longitudinal analyses of social network data. Hypothesis 2.1: Social norms rejecting SV will increase, and 12-month incidence of SV will decrease at 24-month follow-up among C2H participants relative to those in control programs, and these effects will diffuse via paths of influence across social networks assessed via Aim 1. AIM 3: Extend Aim 2 findings via analyses of multiple waves of school-based data and geocoded social media data to yield multiple tests of community-level effects of C2H on SV social norms and incidence. Hypotheses 3.1: Analyses of data from the California Healthy Kids Survey (ages 14-19 yrs) and Twitter (>13 yrs) collected from C2H and control communities (coincident with baseline and 24-month follow-up social network data) will yield evidence of community-level effects of C2H on SV social norms and incidence consistent with individual and network-level effects observed via Aim 2 analyses.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 1001
Est. completion date September 30, 2025
Est. primary completion date June 19, 2025
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 14 Years to 24 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Must be between 14-24 years old - Must be enrolled in program with partner organization(s) or have been nominated by a peer enrolled in the partner programs - Provide informed consent to participate Exclusion Criteria: - Under age 14 - Over age 24

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Close to Home
Close to Home (C2H), a community mobilization model developed in Boston and adapted for California, is specifically designed to prevent SV by strengthening community social connections and engaging whole communities in dialogue and action to transform social norms. The C2H model guides communities through four phases: 1) Assess, 2) Talk, 3) Build, and 4) Act. C2H mobilizes diverse groups of people residing in a shared geography and linked by social and political ties to engage in joint actions for SV prevention

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Dr. Jay Silverman San Diego California

Sponsors (12)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of California, San Diego 4-H, Alliance for Community Transformations, California Department of Public Health, Center for Community Solutions, Community Beyond Violence, Community Solutions, East Los Angeles Womens Center, Lumina Alliance, Sierra Community House, Strength United, ValorUS

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Virtual/Online Sexual Harassment - Digital Dating Abuse Scale Two item measure sexual harassment victimization and six items measure perpetration online, over text, or through social media. Response options: yes, in the last 12 months; yes, prior to last 12 months; never. Items used are adapted from the Digital Dating Abuse Scale - Reed, L. A., Tolman, R. M., & Ward, L. M. (2017). Gender matters: Experiences and consequences of digital dating abuse victimization in adolescent dating relationships. Journal of adolescence, 59, 79-89. 2 years
Primary In-Person Sexual Harassment & Violence - Sexual Harassment & Violence Scale One item measures in-person sexual harassment victimization and three items measure perpetration. Response options: yes, in the last 12 months; yes, prior to last 12 months; never. Items were adapted from Mitchell, K. J., Ybarra, M. L., & Korchmaros, J. D. (2014). Sexual harassment among adolescents of different sexual orientations and gender identities. Child abuse & neglect, 38(2), 280-295 and Miller, E., Jones, K. A., Ripper, L., Paglisotti, T., Mulbah, P., & Abebe, K. Z. (2020). An athletic coach-delivered middle school gender violence prevention program: A cluster randomized clinical trial. JAMA pediatrics, 174(3), 241-249. 2 years
Primary Dating Violence Victimization- Coaching Boys into Men Modified Dating Violence Victimization/Perpetration Scale Two items measure dating violence victimization. Response options: yes, in the last 12 months; yes, prior to last 12 months; never. Items were adapted from Miller, E., Jones, K. A., Ripper, L., Paglisotti, T., Mulbah, P., & Abebe, K. Z. (2020). An athletic coach-delivered middle school gender violence prevention program: A cluster randomized clinical trial. JAMA pediatrics, 174(3), 241-249. 2 years
Primary Dating Violence Perpetration- Coaching Boys into Men Modified Dating Violence Victimization/Perpetration Scale Four items measure perpetration. Response options: yes, in the last 12 months; yes, prior to last 12 months; never. Items were adapted from Miller, E., Jones, K. A., Ripper, L., Paglisotti, T., Mulbah, P., & Abebe, K. Z. (2020). An athletic coach-delivered middle school gender violence prevention program: A cluster randomized clinical trial. JAMA pediatrics, 174(3), 241-249. 2 years
Primary Sexual Violence Victimization/Perpetration - Coaching Boys into Men Modified Perpetration Scale One item measures in-person sexual violence victimization and twp items measure perpetration. Response options: yes, in the last 12 months; yes, prior to last 12 months; never. Items were adapted from Miller, E., Jones, K. A., Ripper, L., Paglisotti, T., Mulbah, P., & Abebe, K. Z. (2020). An athletic coach-delivered middle school gender violence prevention program: A cluster randomized clinical trial. JAMA pediatrics, 174(3), 241-249. 2 years
Primary LGBTQ+ and Gender Minority Violence- Victimization Scale Nine items measure specific forms of sexual violence and harassment victimization experienced by sexual and gender minority youth. Response options: yes, in the last 12 months; yes, prior to last 12 months; never. Items adapted from Peitzmeier SM, Wirtz AL, Humes E. et al. The transgender-specific intimate partner violence scale for research and practice: Validation in a sample of transgender women. Social Science & Medicine. 2021. 291: 114495. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114495 and Scheer J, Woulfe JM, Goodman LA. Psychometric validation of the identity abuse scale among LGBTQ individuals. Community Psychology. 2018. 2 years
Secondary Social Norms- Sexual Violence Social Norms Scale Four item scale assessing injunctive social norms related to perceived acceptability of SV among peers developed for this study; not yet validated. 2 years
Secondary Social Norms- Shared Concern about Sexual and Dating Violence Scale Three item measure of social norms related to expectations of people's actions around preventing sexual and dating violence in the community (descriptive norm). Response options: 6-point Likert scale; strongly disagree to strongly agree. Adapted from Lippman 2016. Development, Validation, and Performance of a Scale to Measure Community Mobilization. Soc Sci Med. 2016 May ; 157: 127-137. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.04.002 2 years
Secondary Social Cohesion Scale Two item measure of perceived social cohesion in community. Response options: 6-point Likert scale; strongly disagree to strongly agree. Items adapted from Banyard, Edwards. 2019. "What would the neighbors do?" Measuring sexual and domestic violence prevention social norms among youth and adults https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/jcop.22201; Yes change: Banyard, Edwards, Rizzo 2020. Improving Social Norms and Actions to Prevent Sexual and Intimate Partner Violence: A Pilot Study of the Impact of Green Dot Community on Youth https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2632077020966571 2 years
Secondary Community Connectedness Scale Four items assessing perceived connection to fellow youth in the intervention program. Response options: 6-point Likert scale; strongly disagree to strongly agree. Adapted from Lippman 2016. Development, Validation, and Performance of a Scale to Measure Community Mobilization. Soc Sci Med. 2016 May ; 157: 127-137. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.04.002 2 years
Secondary Sense of Belonging Scale Two items measuring sense of belonging to the community. Response options: 6-point Likert scale; strongly disagree to strongly agree. Adapted from Fujiwara, T., & Kawachi, I. (2008). Social capital and health: a study of adult twins in the US. American journal of preventive medicine, 35(2), 139-144. 2 years
Secondary Sense of Community Scale Six item scale measuring sense of community connectedness. Response options: 6-point Likert scale; strongly disagree to strongly agree. Adapted from Peterson, N.A., Speer, P.W., & Hughey, J. (2006). Measuring sense of community: A methodological interpretation of the factor structure debate. Journal of Community Psychology, 34, 453-469. 2 years
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