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一项针对黑人和西班牙裔青春期少女的性健康视频干预的随机试验。

Randomized Trial of a Sexual Health Video Intervention for Black and Hispanic Adolescent Females.

机构信息

The Policy & Research Group, 8434 Oak Street, 70118, New Orleans, LA, USA.

出版信息

Prev Sci. 2023 Dec;24(Suppl 2):262-271. doi: 10.1007/s11121-023-01499-0. Epub 2023 Feb 3.

Abstract

Despite significant declines, adolescent birth rates in the USA are higher than other industrialized countries, with black and Hispanic youth disproportionately affected. This study assessed the efficacy of a single-session, entertainment-education sexual health video intervention for these populations. Using an individual-level randomized controlled trial, 1770 18- to 19-year-old black and Hispanic females were assigned to watch Plan A (n = 886) or a control video (n = 884) prior to a sexual reproductive health (SRH) visit. Participants self-reported data at baseline and 3 months post-baseline. Within an intent-to-treat framework, we estimated the average causal effect of assignment to Plan A on three confirmatory and five exploratory outcomes. We found that individuals assigned to Plan A had higher contraceptive knowledge, may be more likely to get sexually transmitted infection (STI) testing, and may have elevated HIV/STI risk perceptions 3 months post-video. Although we found no difference in long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) use nor frequency of condomless sex in the full sample, we did observe that first-time SRH visitors assigned to Plan A had a higher probability of using LARC than those in the control group. This study demonstrates that Plan A is a low-burden, inexpensive, and highly scalable video intervention for black and Hispanic adolescent females that has significant and borderline significant effects on protective sexual health behaviors and important antecedents. It adds to the evidence base of effective teen pregnancy prevention programs and the limited set of rigorous and causal studies investigating the effectiveness of entertainment-education interventions on sexual risk reduction. Registered in ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03238313) on August 3, 2017.

摘要

尽管美国青少年的出生率显著下降,但仍高于其他工业化国家,黑人和西班牙裔青年的比例不成比例地受到影响。本研究评估了单次娱乐性教育性健康视频干预对这些人群的效果。使用个体水平的随机对照试验,1770 名 18 至 19 岁的黑人和西班牙裔女性在进行性生殖健康 (SRH) 就诊前被分配观看计划 A(n=886)或对照视频(n=884)。参与者在基线和基线后 3 个月自我报告数据。在意向治疗框架内,我们估计了分配给计划 A 的平均因果效应对三个确认性和五个探索性结果的影响。我们发现,分配给计划 A 的个体具有更高的避孕知识,可能更有可能进行性传播感染 (STI) 检测,并且在观看视频后 3 个月可能对 HIV/STI 风险的认识更高。尽管我们在全样本中未发现长效可逆避孕 (LARC) 的使用或无保护性行为的频率有差异,但我们确实观察到首次进行 SRH 就诊的计划 A 分配者使用 LARC 的可能性高于对照组。本研究表明,计划 A 是一种低负担、低成本、高度可扩展的视频干预措施,适用于黑人和西班牙裔少女,对保护性行为健康和重要的先行因素具有显著和边缘显著的影响。它为有效的青少年怀孕预防计划和有限的严格和因果研究提供了证据,这些研究调查了娱乐性教育干预对减少性风险的有效性。2017 年 8 月 3 日在 ClinicalTrials.gov(NCT03238313)注册。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/5778/10764370/bf8d6feb329d/11121_2023_1499_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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