Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA.
Development Media International, London, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2020 Nov 17;20(1):1734. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-09837-5.
Given the long-term health effects of smoking during adolescence and the substantial role that tobacco-related morbidity and mortality play in the global burden of disease, there is a worldwide need to design and implement effective youth-focused smoking prevention interventions. While smoking prevention interventions that focus on both social competence and social influence have been successful in preventing smoking uptake among adolescents in developed countries, their effectiveness in developing countries has not yet been clearly demonstrated. SKY Girls is a multimedia, empowerment and anti-smoking program aimed at 13-16-year old girls in Accra, Ghana. The program uses school and community-based events, a magazine, movies, a radio program, social media and other promotional activities to stimulate normative and behavioral change.
This study uses pre/post longitudinal data on 2625 girls collected from an interviewer-administered questionnaire. A quasi-experimental matched design was used, incorporating comparison cities with limited or no exposure to SKY Girls (Teshie, Kumasi and Sunyani). Fixed-effects modeling with inverse probability weighting was used to obtain doubly robust estimators and measure the causal influence of SKY Girls on a set of 15 outcome indicators.
Results indicate that living and studying in the intervention city was associated with an 11.4 percentage point (pp) (95% CI [2.1, 20.7]) increase in the proportion of girls perceiving support outside their families; an 11.7 pp. decrease (95% CI [- 20.8, - 2.6]) in girls' perception of pressure to smoke cigarettes; a 12.3 pp. increase (95% CI [2.1, 20.7]) in the proportion of girls who had conversations with friends about smoking; an 11.7 pp. increase (95% CI [3.8, 20.8]) in their perceived ability to make choices about what they like and do not like, and 20.3 pp. (95% CI [- 28.4, - 12.2]) and 12.1 pp. (95% CI [- 20.7, - 3.5]) reductions in the proportion agreeing with the idea that peers can justify smoking shisha and cigarettes, respectively. An analysis of the dose-effect associations between exposure to multiple campaign components and desired outcomes was included and discussed.
The study demonstrates the effectiveness of a multimedia campaign to increase perceived support, empowerment and improve decision-making among adolescent girls in a developing country.
鉴于青少年吸烟对长期健康的影响,以及与烟草有关的发病率和死亡率在全球疾病负担中所占的重要比例,全世界都需要设计和实施有效的以青少年为重点的预防吸烟干预措施。虽然针对社交能力和社交影响力的预防吸烟干预措施在发达国家成功预防了青少年吸烟,但这些措施在发展中国家的有效性尚未得到明确证明。SKY Girls 是一个针对加纳阿克拉 13-16 岁女孩的多媒体、赋权和反吸烟项目。该项目利用学校和社区活动、杂志、电影、广播节目、社交媒体和其他宣传活动,激发规范和行为改变。
本研究使用了从 2625 名女孩的访谈式问卷调查中收集的预/后向纵向数据。采用准实验匹配设计,纳入了与 SKY Girls 接触有限或没有接触的比较城市(特谢伊、库马西和萨尼亚尼)。采用逆概率加权的固定效应模型,获得双重稳健估计量,并衡量 SKY Girls 对一组 15 个结果指标的因果影响。
结果表明,生活和学习在干预城市与女孩感知家庭以外支持的比例增加 11.4 个百分点(95%置信区间 [2.1,20.7]);女孩感知吸烟压力减少 11.7 个百分点(95%置信区间 [-20.8,-2.6]);与朋友就吸烟进行对话的女孩比例增加 12.3 个百分点(95%置信区间 [2.1,20.7]);女孩认为自己能够做出喜欢和不喜欢的选择的能力增加 11.7 个百分点(95%置信区间 [3.8,20.8]);同意同伴可以为吸烟水烟和香烟找借口的比例分别减少 20.3 个百分点(95%置信区间 [-28.4,-12.2])和 12.1 个百分点(95%置信区间 [-20.7,-3.5])。分析了暴露于多个运动成分与期望结果之间的剂量效应关系,并进行了讨论。
该研究证明了多媒体运动在提高发展中国家青少年的感知支持、赋权和改善决策能力方面的有效性。