Title: Randomized Controlled Trial of a Webbased Youth Smoking Intervention
1Randomized Controlled Trial of a Web-based Youth
Smoking Intervention
- Oonagh Maley, Cameron Norman Harvey Skinner
- Department of Public Health Sciences
- University of Toronto
FUNDED BY
2Learning Objectives
- Describe key elements for effective engagement of
adolescents using a web-based smoking cessation
and prevention intervention - Identify strategies for implementing a web-based
randomized control study in a school setting - Recognize challenges inherent in conducting
smoking cessation research in schools and using
web-based resources
3Presentation Overview
- Introduce the Smoking Zine website
- Examine challenges of working with youth about
tobacco - Highlight innovative opportunities of eHealth for
tobacco control - Provide an overview of the TeenNet Project
- Describe the randomized trial initial results
- Review Lessons Learned
4The Smoking Zine
5Tobacco Youth Challenges and Opportunities
6The High Cost of Smoking
- The lifetime medical costs of cigarette smokers
are approximately 1/3 higher than non-smokers - Harvard Report (1996) concluded that nearly
two-thirds of cancer deaths (US) are linked to
preventable risk behaviors - 30 smoking
- 30 adult diet and obesity
- 5 physical activity level
- Law and Tang (1995) estimate a cost of 1,500
(US) for saving a life through routine 5-minute
advice to all smokers to stop - Few procedures in medicine carry so small a cost
of saving a life
7Tobaccos Impact on Children Youth
- Direct Effects 250 million children alive today
will be killed by tobacco in the future if
current consumption patterns continue - Indirect Effects Nearly 700 million children
(almost half worlds population) breath air
polluted by second hand smoke - World Health Organization (2001). Tobacco and the
Rights of the Child. Geneva.
8Smoking Initiation in Canada
- Begin - 8 years
- Increase 11 years
- Peak 16 years
- Smoke free at 19 years Little chance of ever
starting
9Stages of Change of Canadian Smokers
Source CTUMS, 2001
10The Challenge is Large.but not Insurmountable
11Why the Internet?
12Youth Online
- United States 73 of youth online, 57 of
general population using the Internet for health
information1 - Canada 99 of youth online, 52 have used the
Internet for health information2 - 1 PEW Internet American Life Project (2001)
- 2 Environics / Media Awareness (2001)
13Key Reasons for Using the Internet for Youth
Tobacco Control
- Reaches youth where they are
- Interventions are not bound by time or space
- Interactivity and active learning media
combinations - Potential for tailoring to users
- Easy to update and modify
- Minimal cost for maximum reach
- Because the tobacco industry is already there!
14Designing Effective Interventions
- Accessible
- Individualized
- Remote (e.g.,telephone) Group Counselling
- Provide opportunities for assisted self-help
- Strengthen social support networks
- Use biomarker feedback
- Must be efficient ( realistic)
- Population X Reach X Efficacy
- See Niaura Abrams, 2002
15The TeenNet Project
Based at Department of Public Health
Sciences Faculty of Medicine University of
Toronto Toronto, Ontario Canada
16TeenNet Research Project
- Established in 1995
- Lead by Dr. Harvey Skinner
- Based in the Department of Public Health Sciences
in the Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto - http//www.teennetproject.org
17TeenNet Project Goals
- Generate new knowledge and practical tools for
engaging youth in health promotion - Evaluate innovative models for using Interactive
Communication Technology for health promotion - Collaborate for research and capacity building
locally, nationally and internationally - Disseminate best practices and models for
knowledge translation and sustainability .
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19TeenNets Guiding Principles
- Participatory
- Relevant to Youth
- Autonomy Supporting
- Active Learning and Fun
- Accessible
- Youth in Action Approach
20Youth in Action Approach
- Initial needs identification
- Focus groups with youth
- Brain storming sessions with youth
- Concept development and assessment
- Youth working groups
- Youth forums
- Reality checks with youth
- Professional advisors and/or advisory groups
- Prototype development and assessment
- Youth employees
- Reality checks with youth and practitioners
- Quality review committee (for website links)
- Ongoing feedback through website and discussion
boards
21TeenNet Research Projects
- Adolescent Gambling
- Community Capacity
- Global Youth Voices
- Positive Youth Project
- Smoking Zine Evaluation
- Youth, Technology and Access
22Diverse Youth
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24Randomized Controlled Trial Overview
- Principal Investigator Harvey Skinner
- Co-Investigators Eudice Goldberg
- Cameron Norman
- Program Manager Oonagh Maley
Funded by
25What was this study?
- Population Adolescents (grades 9-11)
- Issue Smoking eHealth Literacy
- Program Web Face-to-face
- Setting School
- Desired Effect Population impact
26Community Partners
- Toronto Public Health (Tobacco Team)
- YMCA Youth Substance Abuse Program, Toronto
27The Team
- Team Leaders
- Oonagh Maley, MISt
- Cameron Norman, MA
- Public Health Nurses
- Mary-Anne McBean
- Sue St John
- Sarah Newham
- Voula Varsamidou
- Youth Counsellors Research Assistants
- Lisa Ennis, MSW--RSW
- Celeste Le Duigou, MSW--RSW
- Jennifer Moses, MSW
- Jennifer Reynolds, MEd
- Bohdan Turok, MEd CCC, CHt
28TeenNet Support
- Sherry Biscope, MHSc
- Shawn Chirrey, MHSc
- Jennifer Elliott
- Sarah Flicker, MPH
- Vero Michelli
- Meg Morrison, MEd
- Mabel Soo
29Initial Research
- Spring 2000 Instrument Development
- Summer-Fall 2000 Community-based trial
- Winter-Spring 2001 Instrument re-development
- Summer 2002 Community-based pilot tests
- 1995-2003
- Ongoing reality checks
- Test groups
30Study Design
31Study Overview
- A two-group randomized trial
- Major Research Questions
- Does the Smoking Zine Intervention promote
behaviour change in youth smokers? - Does the Smoking Zine enhance resistance to
smoking among non-smokers? - Does exposing adolescents to critical appraisal
tools assist them in building e-Health
literacy?
32Study Timeline (Administrative)
- 2000 Focused partnership with local Public
Health Department develops - 2001 Consultations with School Administrators
curriculum consultants - 2001 Collaboration with YMCA-YSAP
- 2001-2 Relationship building with individual
schools - 2002 Active Passive Consent Process
33Study Overview
- 1. Smoking Zine Website Intervention including
motivational counseling, virtual group support,
feedback - 2. Control Condition website evaluation task
- Measures Pre Post intervention, 3 6 month
follow-up - a) Resistance to Smoking
- b) Intentions to Smoke
- c) Smoking Behavior
- Initial Results
- School by Grade by Sex by Smoking Status
interaction - e.g. decreased tobacco use for grade 9 boys
34Study Procedures
- Complete baseline instruments
- Zine or Web Evaluation (Control) Task with
booklet in class - 10-minute MI Group with booklet
- Complete Post-test measures
- CO Monitor
- Tailored email messages between follow-ups
- Complete follow-up assessments (3 6 mo.)
35The Interventions
36Intervention
- Intervention The Smoking Zine including access
to online discussion forum for peer support and
mutual aid - Control Modified website evaluation checklist
applied to three non-health websites - Group-based motivational interview
- Booklet
- Follow-up tailored emails
37Intervention Smoking Zine
38The Smoking Zine
- Launched May 2000
- Based on multiple theoretical approaches
- Youth empowerment Harm Reduction approach to
tobacco use - Youth in Action approach to development and
evaluation - Multilingual (English, French, Chinese)
39The Smoking Zine
- Five stages
- Self-assessments, games, discussion forum,
personalized quit plans - Builds motivation through
- Building on readiness for change
- Enhancing self-efficacy
- Fostering self-determination
- Connecting with community/peers
- Identifying discrepancies between goals and
behaviour - Personal forecasting
40Linking Theory Evidence
- Health Behaviour Models (individual level)
- Self-Determination Theory
- Social Cognitive Theory (Self-Efficacy)
- Transtheoretical Model (Readiness for Change)
- Motivational Interviewing (Decision Balance)
- Theory of Reasoned Action Planned Behavior
- Health Belief Model
- Multisystems - multilevel integration
- Health Promotion five coordinated actions
- (1986 WHO Ottawa Charter)
- Community Capacity Building and Mobilization
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44Meet the Smoking Zine
45Control Condition Website Evaluation
46Control Condition Web Evaluation
47Control Task Website Evaluation
- Developed with youth health consumers
- Includes both professional and
consumer-oriented criteria - Focus on both knowledge and skill development
48Booklets
49Smoking Zine Booklet
- Created to allow youth to record results from the
Zine without printing - Wallet card with login information
- Used in MI discussions
- May be taken home and re-used as needed
50Smoking Zine Booklet
51CyberHealthLiteracy Booklet
- Created to allow youth to review websites and
calculate a rating based on five criteria - Wallet card with cyberliteracy url
- Used in MI discussions
- May be taken home and re-used as needed
52Booklet Web Evaluation
53Motivational Interview
54Motivational Interviewing
- An approach to fostering change through
enhancement of a clients readiness and intrinsic
motivation - Motivational interviewing is a client-centred,
directive method for enhancing intrinsic
motivation to change by exploring and resolving
ambivalence (Miller Rollnick, 2002)
55Motivational Interviewing Adaptation for Group
Setting
- Uses a single-session model
- Brief format (10 minutes in duration)
- Few known attempts at adapting to group form no
known outcome studies - No single-session group models
- Focus on the Decision Balance (pros and cons) and
exploring ambivalence about change
56Sample Discussion Questions
57Randomized Controlled TrialOutcome Measures
58Measurement Points
59Smoker Definition (Mills et al., 1994)
- Q1 Which of the following statements best
describes your use of tobacco in your lifetime? -
- Q2 During the past 30 days, on how many days did
you smoke cigarettes? -
60Lifestyle Technology Profile
- 30-item questionnaire on
- Risk behaviors
- e.g., Substance use, diet exercise
- Technology use
- e.g., email, World Wide Web, Wireless phones
- Demographics
- e.g., age, grade, cultural affiliation
61Measures of ChangeLikelihood of Action Scale
eHEALS
- 23-item scale based on the five major behavior
change theories used to guide the Smoking Zine
(Skinner, 2002) - Pilot tested with youth in community, school and
clinical settings over 3 years - Scale items obtained through tobacco survey
databases, published scales and partnership with
other researchers in the area of adolescent
health - eHEALS eHealth Literacy Scale
62Likelihood of Action Index
63Data Collection
64Follow-up
65Follow-up
- Response Rates
- 89 (3-months) 87 (6-months)
- Participants complete survey in class
- 25 randomly chosen to complete CO monitoring
not at 6-month due to SARS outbreak - Tailored email support follows until 6-months
- Participants complete survey in class
- All participants are informed of the Zine and Web
Evaluation resources
66CO Monitoring
- Validates smoking self-report
- Potential for bogus pipeline
- Opportunity to engage youth and reinforce the
message
67Data Analysis and Results
68Study Demographics
- N1410
- 760 Boys
- 650 Girls
- 214 smokers at baseline (15 of total)
- 14 urban high schools Public Catholic
districts - 83 classes
- Grades 9-11
- Passive and Active Parental Consent
- Active Youth Consent
69Key Findings
- Smoking Zines greatest potential impact with
- Grade 9 students (cessation and prevention)
- Boys
- Smokers (Zine as treatment)
- High-risk schools
- eHealth Literacy
- Main effect
-
- ? Small intervention effect with great potential
cumulative effect on a population level
70Planned Analysis Results
- I. Psychometric Assessment
- Item (reliability) analysis
- Confirmatory factor analysis
- II. Impact Assessment
- Doubly-repeated Measures MANOVA (SPSS v11.5)
- Structural Equation Modeling (Mplus, v2.14)
- Hierarchical Linear Modeling (MLwiN v1.1)
71AnalysisThree Approaches
- MANOVA Multivariate Analysis of Variance
- Intervention X Smoker X Grade X Sex interaction
- HLM Hierarchical Linear Modeling
- School and Grade level effects
- Multiple Rs ranging from .88 (post) to .40
(6-month) - SEM Structural Equation Modeling
- I. Measurement model three factor (latent
variables) - II. Path Model
72Outcome Measures
- Three Key Scales
- Resistance to smoking
- Intentions to smoke
- Cigarette consumption
- Smoking Status
- Satisfaction with Intervention
73Cigarette Use Scale
74Behavioral Intention Scale
75Resistance to Smoking Scale
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77Study Impact
- Interaction effects indicate strongest effect
for grade 9s for both prevention and cessation - Most noticeable effects with smokers (cessation)
78Smoking Cessation
79Resistance to Smoking (p lt .05)
- Grade
- Grade by Sex
- Most noticeable influence on grade 9 boys
80Behavior Intention (p lt .05)
- Grade
- Group by Grade
- Group by Smoker by Grade
- Group by Smoker by Grade by Sex
- Smoker by Grade by Sex
- Most noticeable influence on smokers (boys)
in grade 9
81Cigarette Use (p lt .05)
- Grade
- Group by Smoker by Sex
- Grade by Sex
- Smoker by Grade
- Smoker by Grade by Sex
- Most noticeable influence on smokers (boys)
in grade 9
82Key Findings
- Smoking Zines greatest potential impact with
- Grade 9 students (cessation and prevention)
- Boys
- Smokers (Zine as treatment)
- High-risk schools
- eHealth Literacy
- Main effect
-
- ? Small intervention effect with great potential
cumulative effect on a population level
83Multi-level Modelling
84In Progress Multi-level Model
Supra-level
Context School, Grade, Class
Individual Sex, Smoker, Intervention
Base Level
85Preliminary findings
- Significant effect for Grade 9 students for both
smoking cessation and prevention of smoking
acting on behavior intention - Effect most noticeable with boys
- No class effects
86Lessons Learned
- Study Process - Web-based Interventions
- The Team - Working with Schools
- Working with Youth
87Lessons Learned 1 Study Process
- Pilot..pilot..pilot
- Build solid community partnerships
- Communicate with your partners
- Hire administrative support
- Debrief and improve process
- Things always take longer!
- No two days are alike
88Lessons Learned 2 The Team
- Identify a clear chain of command
- Hire staff to complement each other
- Ensure a range of experience with youth
- Select staff with leadership skills
- Cross train staff on all study roles
- Have back-up staff available and trained
89Lessons Learned 3 Web-based Interventions
- Youth and adult testing
- Onsite technology assessments
- Quality of access is an issue
- Literacy is an issue
- ESL and Special needs are an issue
- On-call technical support is critical
- Establish back-up procedures in advance
- Upfront development costs extensive
90Lessons Learned 4 Working With Schools
- Create partnerships early
- Persistence is key
- Consult with educators administrators
- Reflect school realities in your study
- Outline school roles and responsibilities
- Provide value to schools, teachers students
91Lessons Learned 4 Working With Schools
- Identify fit with existing activities
curriculum - School level compensation
- Identify and support a champion
- Provide ongoing feedback
- Changing routine is difficult
- Dont assume support structures
92Lessons Learned 5 Working With Youth
- Communicate with respect
- Provide clear concise instructions
- They are interested in research
- Get back to them with results
- Grade 9 is not Grade 10 is not Grade 11
93Future Directions
94Next Steps
- Follow-up studies examining the interaction
effects - Boys, Lower grades, High-Risk Schools
- Whole-school approach (including parents and
community) - Smoking Zine in primary care settings
- International Applications
- China
- Brazil
- Middle East
95Take Home Message
96Take Home Messages
- Ensure authentic youth involvement in all
phasesdesign,implementation,evaluation - Pilot test the intervention in stages (iterative
development) - Build partnerships that respect and recognize
their needs and challenges
97Designing Effective Interventions
- Accessible
- Individualized
- Remote Group Counselling
- Provide opportunities for assisted self-help
- Strengthen social support networks
- Use biomarker feedback
- Must be efficient ( realistic)
- Population X Reach X Efficacy
98Thank you ?
99Contact Us
- Oonagh Maley
- oonagh.maley_at_utoronto.ca
- 416.978.7543
- Cameron Norman
- cameron.norman_at_utoronto.ca
- 416.209.6740