Miller Elizabeth, Jones Kelley A, McCauley Heather L, Rofey Dana L, Clark Duncan B, Talis Janine M, Anderson Jocelyn C, Chugani Carla D, Coulter Robert W S, Abebe Kaleab Z
Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Am J Prev Med. 2020 Jul;59(1):98-108. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2020.02.007. Epub 2020 Apr 30.
Sexual violence, particularly in the context of drinking, is prevalent on college campuses. This study tested a brief intervention to prevent sexual violence among students receiving care from college health centers.
This study was a two-arm, unblinded cluster RCT.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: On 28 campuses with health/counseling centers (1:1 randomization allocation; 12 intervention and 16 control), from September 2015 to March 2018, a total of 2,291 students seeking care at college health centers completed surveys before the appointment, immediately after, 4 months later, and 12 months later.
Intervention college health center staff received training on delivering sexual violence education to all students seeking care. Control sites provided information about drinking responsibly.
The primary outcome was students' change in recognition of sexual violence. Additional outcomes included sexual violence disclosure and use of services among students with a history of sexual violence at baseline. Generalized linear mixed models accounting for campus-level clustering assessed intervention effects. Data were analyzed from September 2018 to June 2019.
Half (55%) of students seeking care at college health centers reported any history of sexual violence exposure. No between-group differences in primary (β=0.001, 95% CI= -0.04, 0.04) or secondary outcomes emerged between intervention and control students. Post-hoc analyses adjusting for the intensity of intervention delivery (intensity-adjusted) revealed an increase in self-efficacy to use harm reduction strategies (β=0.09, 95% CI=0.01, 0.18) among intervention participants. Among those who reported sexual violence at baseline, intervention students had increased odds of disclosing violence during the visit (AOR=4.47, 95% CI=2.25, 8.89) in intensity-adjusted analyses compared with control. No between-group differences emerged for remaining outcomes.
Sexual violence exposure is high among students seeking care in college health centers. A brief provider-delivered sexual violence intervention, when implemented with fidelity, was associated with improved self-efficacy to use harm reduction and increased disclosure of sexual violence during clinical encounters but no increased use of services. More interventions that are stronger in intensity are needed to connect students to sexual violence services.
This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov NCT02355470.
性暴力,尤其是在饮酒的情况下,在大学校园中很普遍。本研究测试了一种简短干预措施,以预防在大学健康中心接受护理的学生中的性暴力行为。
本研究是一项双臂、非盲群集随机对照试验。
设置/参与者:在2015年9月至2018年3月期间,在28个设有健康/咨询中心的校园中(1:1随机分配;12个干预组和16个对照组),共有2291名在大学健康中心寻求护理的学生在预约前、预约后立即、4个月后和12个月后完成了调查。
干预组的大学健康中心工作人员接受了为所有寻求护理的学生提供性暴力教育的培训。对照组提供了关于负责任饮酒的信息。
主要结局是学生对性暴力认知的变化。其他结局包括性暴力披露以及基线时有性暴力史的学生对服务的使用情况。考虑到校园层面聚类的广义线性混合模型评估了干预效果。数据于2018年9月至2019年6月进行分析。
在大学健康中心寻求护理的学生中,一半(55%)报告有任何性暴力暴露史。干预组和对照组学生在主要结局(β=0.001,95%置信区间=-0.04,0.04)或次要结局方面没有组间差异。调整干预实施强度后的事后分析(强度调整)显示,干预组参与者使用减少伤害策略的自我效能有所提高(β=0.09,95%置信区间=0.01,0.18)。在基线时报告有性暴力的学生中,在强度调整分析中,与对照组相比,干预组学生在就诊期间披露暴力行为的几率增加(优势比=4.47,95%置信区间=2.25,8.89)。其余结局没有组间差异。
在大学健康中心寻求护理的学生中性暴力暴露率很高。由提供者实施的简短性暴力干预措施,若能忠实地实施,与使用减少伤害策略的自我效能提高以及临床就诊期间性暴力披露增加相关,但服务使用并未增加。需要更多强度更大的干预措施,以便让学生获得性暴力服务。