Cyberbullying Clinical Trial
Official title:
Bullying Prevention Intervention for Adolescent Primary Care Patients
The purpose of this randomized controlled study is to evaluate acceptability and feasibility, and to gather preliminary data about efficacy, of "iPACT" (intervention to Prevent Adolescent Cyber-victimization with Text messages), a brief in-clinic introductory session + longitudinal automated text-message-based secondary prevention program for adolescents with a history of past-year cyber-victimization presenting to a pediatric clinic for well-child visits.
Cyber-victimization predicts depressive symptoms and suicidality; it correlates with PTSD
symptoms, alcohol and other drug use, physical peer violence, and dating violence.
Almost 80% of adolescents have a well-child visit with their pediatrician each year.
Pediatricians recognize this visit as an important opportunity for behavioral screening,
interventions, and referrals, but they currently lack cyber-victimization interventions that
are feasible and effective in the clinical setting. Personalized text-message interventions
are accessible, feasible, and may be effective with these adolescents.
The purpose of this study is to test the feasibility and acceptability of a novel
text-message-augmented secondary prevention intervention, "iPACT." Drawing on effective
cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and motivational interviewing (MI) depression and violence
prevention interventions, a brief in-clinic session will introduce basic cognitive and
behavioral strategies. Following their clinic visit, eight weeks of tailored CBT-informed
daily text messages will be sent, to enhance skills and remind participants of
self-determined goals.
Participants will be identified in the course of usual clinical care. If eligible, parents
will be consented and participants assented. Participants will complete a baseline assessment
and will be randomized to experimental (iPACT, n=25) or enhanced usual care (EUC, n=25) care,
using stratified block randomization.
iPACT group participants will participate in a brief, structured in-clinic introduction on
CBT and the iPACT program, followed by 8 weeks of tailored, two-way, CBT-and MI-informed
automated text messages (short message service, SMS). EUC group participants will receive
standardized information on cyberbullying. The current standard of care for these patients is
no care: no cyber-victimization screening assessment protocols are currently used in our
clinic. Both iPACT and EUC conditions therefore exceed current levels of care.
At baseline, 8 week follow-up, and 16 week follow-up, participants will complete assessments
on cyberbullying, peer violence, and cognitive/behavioral skill-sets. At the 8-week
follow-up, standardized qualitative and quantitative process measures will be administered to
assess efficacy, acceptability, usability, and feasibility.
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