Department of Human Development and Family Science, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 313 Wallace Hall (0416), 295 West Campus Drive, Blacksburg, VA, 24061, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA.
J Adolesc. 2021 Jan;86:11-14. doi: 10.1016/j.adolescence.2020.11.002. Epub 2020 Nov 28.
Despite the prevalence and negative consequences of dating violence among sexual and gender minority (SGM) adolescents, few prevention programs address dating violence for these groups. We describe the adaptation of the evidence-based Safe Dates dating violence prevention program to be inclusive of SGM adolescents and the outcome of a pilot trial of the expanded curriculum implemented in mixed settings serving both SGM and cisgender, heterosexual youth.
Following a published framework of curriculum adaptation, we gathered information on SGM adolescents' needs and adapted Safe Dates materials to address SGM-specific risk factors for, and manifestations of, dating violence. We piloted the adapted program in 11 US schools and organizations serving SGM and cisgender, heterosexual youth (N = 156). The average age of participants was 15.11 years (SD = 2.76) at baseline. Participants were diverse with respect to race/ethnicity (26% Black/African American, 24% Hispanic/Latino, 21% White, 7% American Indian/Native Alaskan, 5% Asian/Pacific Islander), gender (56% female), and SGM status (35% SGM). Multi-level models measured change in scores on a written measure of dating violence knowledge from pre-test to post-test.
Dating violence knowledge increased significantly. Improvements did not differ by gender (female-identified versus not female-identified) or SGM status.
Results support initial feasibility and efficacy of dating violence prevention programs that include both SGM and cisgender, heterosexual adolescents. The program normalizes diverse SGM identities and encourages participation of youth who are questioning or choosing not to disclose their gender or sexual identities. Larger-scale research should examine effects on dating violence experiences.
尽管性少数群体(SGM)青少年中存在约会暴力且后果严重,但很少有预防计划针对这些群体的约会暴力问题。我们描述了对基于证据的 Safe Dates 约会暴力预防计划的改编,以将 SGM 青少年纳入其中,并介绍了在同时为 SGM 和顺性别异性恋青年服务的混合环境中实施扩大课程的试点试验结果。
根据课程改编的既定框架,我们收集了 SGM 青少年的需求信息,并改编了 Safe Dates 材料,以解决约会暴力的 SGM 特定风险因素和表现形式。我们在 11 所美国学校和组织中对改编后的计划进行了试点(N=156)。参与者的平均年龄为 15.11 岁(SD=2.76)。参与者在种族/族裔(26%黑人/非裔美国人,24%西班牙裔/拉丁裔,21%白人,7%美洲印第安人/原住民,5%亚洲/太平洋岛民)、性别(56%女性)和 SGM 身份(35% SGM)方面存在差异。多水平模型衡量了从预测试到后测试的书面约会暴力知识得分的变化。
约会暴力知识显著增加。性别(女性认同与非女性认同)或 SGM 身份的改善没有差异。
结果支持包括 SGM 和顺性别异性恋青少年在内的约会暴力预防计划的初步可行性和有效性。该计划使多样化的 SGM 身份正常化,并鼓励那些正在质疑或选择不公开其性别或性身份的青年参与。更大规模的研究应检验对约会暴力经历的影响。