Smoking Status Clinical Trial
Official title:
Media Literacy to Prevent Adolescent Smoking
The purpose of this project is to determine if a 3-session anti-smoking media literacy based intervention is more effective that a standard 3-session anti-smoking media literacy intervention at changing students' intention to smoke, actual smoking behavior, attitudes and norms regarding smoking, and level of media literacy.
Cigarette smoking is the top cause of preventable death and disease in the U.S., and about
90% of those who die from smoking begin as adolescents. Because smoking-related mass media
messages (such as episodes of smoking in films and advertisements) significantly increase
adolescent smoking, media literacy, defined as analysis and evaluation of mass media
messages, presents a promising new framework for development of innovative school-based
tobacco control programs. Media literacy may be more effective than standard tobacco
education among the populations that are at greatest risk for smoking, such as
African-Americans and the socio-economically disadvantaged, and national organizations have
called for use of media literacy to reduce smoking. However, anti-smoking media literacy
programs have been neither widely implemented nor well-evaluated.
The aims of this project are to determine if a theory-driven, school-based, 3-session
anti-smoking media literacy curriculum delivered to 9th grade students can affect clinically
relevant factors mediating adolescent smoking according to the widely accepted Theory of
Reasoned Action: intention to smoke, smoking behavior, attitude toward smoking, and norms
involving smoking. It is hypothesized that, compared with those exposed to a currently
accepted school-based smoking prevention program, students exposed to the media literacy
program will develop more negative attitudes toward smoking, a more negative sense of smoking
norms, less intention to smoke, and less smoking. We also expect that the curriculum will
improve smoking media literacy scores as measured by a reliable, valid scale.
Over two years, eight high schools will be recruited to randomize all 9th grade health
classrooms to receive either the 3-session media literacy anti-smoking curriculum or a
currently accepted anti-smoking program of equivalent length. This recruitment will occur via
two prominent community organizations responsible for anti-tobacco programming in 50 local
school districts. Experienced health educators will be trained in implementation of both
experimental and control curricula. Outcome measures, demographic data, and other important
covariates will be collected by a questionnaire given three times: at baseline, immediately
post-intervention, and after one year. Questionnaire items are reliable, valid, and
pilot-tested. Process evaluation will be conducted to assess implementation fidelity, to
confirm or refute the findings of the quantitative assessment, to help explain outcome data,
to refine the intervention, and to inform future replications of the curriculum.
Given the substantial nationwide morbidity and mortality due to tobacco use, the role of mass
media messages in adolescent initiation of smoking, and the potential power of media literacy
as an agent for health behavior change, it is essential to study the utility of media
literacy in altering smoking behaviors and antecedents in this age group. If media literacy
programs are successful in buffering the impact of mass media on adolescent smoking, similar
interventions can be developed to prevent other harmful behaviors related to mass media
messages.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT01881607 -
An Integrated Intervention to Reduce Secondhandsmoke in Children
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT03613337 -
Effect of Smoking Status and Genetic Risk Factors on Restenosis and Efficacy of Clopidogrel After de Novo Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
|
||
Completed |
NCT00714207 -
Evaluation of Adolescent Smoking Cessation Programs
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT00262158 -
Analysis of 'Tobacco and Alcohol Tax Law' and Its Impact on Cigarette Consumption
|
N/A |