Johnson Ralph Jay
University of Texas MD, Anderson Cancer Center; Chaplain Texas Medical Center Catholic Chaplaincy Corp, Texas.
Psychol Ment Health Care. 2020;4(1). Epub 2020 Jan 20.
This research brief reports results from an exploratory pilot study on the use of socially acceptable touch in a public setting that accompanies a request to improve program compliance with "street level" crack cocaine users.
Study participants consisted of 120 crack cocaine-using participants in a larger community-based HIV/STD prevention and research program targeting at-risk African-Americans. They were required to return for a series of four booster health education sessions over 2-5 days and 6 month and 1 year follow-up assessments. The most difficult aspect of this program was no-shows for the second booster session; study participants who attended at least two sessions were much more likely to attend all sessions and complete the entire lengthy program. The program director randomly approached some participants after the first visit in a public setting and briefly touched them as part of a handshake; then, the director asked them to return for their follow-up sessions. Whether they were approached or not was random. Analysis comprised descriptive and non-parametric statistics.
Ninety-three percent of participants who were asked to return and were touched returned for the second session; only 75% returned who had been asked to do so but were not touched. A statistically significant difference favored being touched and complying, as measured by second-session returning participants (p < .01), though it appeared the touch / request had more of a preventive than a promotional effect. Extraneous demographic and background factors were ruled out with the exception of age (older participants), which contributed slightly.
Results suggest that a request "anchored" to a socially acceptable public touch is promising in terms of improving program participation and engagement. Limitations and implications for future research are discussed.
本研究简报报告了一项探索性试点研究的结果,该研究探讨了在公共场合使用社会可接受的触摸方式,并附带要求提高针对街头吸食快克可卡因者的项目依从性。
研究参与者包括120名吸食快克可卡因的参与者,他们参与了一个更大的以社区为基础的针对高危非裔美国人的艾滋病毒/性传播疾病预防与研究项目。他们被要求在2至5天内返回参加一系列四次强化健康教育课程,以及6个月和1年的随访评估。该项目最困难的方面是第二次强化课程的失约情况;至少参加过两次课程的研究参与者更有可能参加所有课程并完成整个冗长的项目。项目主任在第一次访问后在公共场合随机接近一些参与者,并作为握手的一部分短暂触摸他们;然后,主任要求他们返回参加后续课程。他们是否被接近是随机的。分析包括描述性和非参数统计。
被要求返回并被触摸的参与者中有93%返回参加第二次课程;而被要求返回但未被触摸的参与者中只有75%返回。以第二次课程返回的参与者衡量,被触摸并遵守要求在统计学上有显著差异(p <.01),尽管看起来触摸/请求的预防作用大于促进作用。除年龄(年龄较大的参与者)外,其他人口统计学和背景因素被排除,年龄因素有轻微影响。
结果表明,与社会可接受的公共触摸相结合的请求在提高项目参与度方面很有前景。讨论了研究的局限性和对未来研究的启示。