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Cancer Prevention for Young Rural Adults

K

Klein Buendel

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cancer

Treatments

Behavioral: 4 Corners Rural Health Cancer Prevention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05618158
0341/0353
5R01CA268037-02 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
1R01CA268037-01A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
4R01CA268037-04 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
5R01CA268037-03 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Young adults aged 18-26 engage in a number of behaviors that increase their risk of developing cancer later in life including sedentary lifestyles, unhealthy eating, nicotine produce us, heavy drinking of alcohol, increased UV exposure, and incomplete uptake of HPV vaccination. A multi-risk factor campaign will be developed to reduce these cancer risk behaviors and delivered to young adults over social media, a popular channel that can reach nearly all young adults. The campaign will be evaluated for effectiveness in a rigorous randomized trial with measures of moderate to vigorous physical activity, healthy eating patterns, nicotine product use, alcohol intake, sunburn prevalence, and HPV vaccination uptake.

Full description

Several risk factors are prevalent during early adulthood that can lead to cancer later in life. Emerging adults (EAs) aged 18-26 residing in rural areas of the United States engage in many cancer risk behaviors, especially sedentary lifestyles, poor eating patterns, nicotine product use, excess alcohol intake, infrequent sun protection, and inadequate uptake of the HPV vaccine. This application responds to RFA-CA-20-051, "Social and Behavioral Intervention Research to Address Modifiable Risk Factors for Cancer in Rural Populations." The goal is to improve cancer risk behavioral factors among diverse EAs aged 18-26 living in rural counties in the Four Corners states, a unique, underserved region, using a social media campaign designed with community advisors. EAs, including in rural communities, are heavy consumers of online content, especially over social media, and social media provide responsive, engaging, and low-cost platforms for distributing cancer prevention information with high dissemination potential. But, social media also circulate inaccurate, misleading, and harmful information. The specific aims of this research are to: 1) Develop a social media intervention for diverse EAs in rural communities via a community-engaged process that combines expert advice, user-generated content, and online instruction to communicate about behavioral cancer risks, cancer misinformation, counter marketing, digital and media literacy, and family communication; 2) evaluate the effect of a theory-based social media intervention on moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA), healthy eating patterns, nicotine product use, alcohol intake, sunburn prevalence, and HPV vaccination with the diverse population of EAs aged 18-26 in rural counties in AZ, CO, NM, and UT (Four Corners states) recruited from Qualtrics' survey panel and enrolled in a pragmatic randomized trial using a stepped-wedge design in which individual EAs will be randomized to 1 of 4 cohorts and receive the social media feed for varying durations in separate Facebook private groups; 3) test if improvements in EAs' cancer risk knowledge and beliefs, digital and media literacy skills, accurate cancer prevention information, and family communication mediate impact of the social media campaign; and 4) explore whether the impact of the social media campaign differs according to: a) level of EAs' engagement with campaign, b) cancer risk factors, and c) biological sex of the participants (as required by NIH). The research is innovative because it tests a theory-based, multi-risk factor approach to cancer prevention with diverse EAs in rural counties, an under-studied population, in a very popular new media. Social media may reach EAs more than interventions through other community channels (e.g., clinics, schools, and workplaces) and for lower cost in the geographically-dispersed, underserved rural communities in the Mountain West. The overall impact is extremely high because it will aid rural EAs in making informed decisions that reduce cancer risk factors and prevent cancer later in life and help EAs critically evaluate and resist misinformation and marketing that promote cancer risk behaviors.

Enrollment

1,796 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 26 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Aged 18-26 years old
  • Resides in a county coded as RUCC 4-9 in Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, or Utah
  • Able to speak and read English
  • Has regular social media engagement
  • Accepts screening call from study staff
  • Consents to participate

Exclusion criteria

  • Participated in community engagement activities
  • Cannot speak and read English
  • Has low or no social media engagement
  • Does not accept a screening call from study staff
  • Does not consent to participate
  • Does not give permission for engagement data to be extracted from Facebook private group
  • If biologically female, currently pregnant

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

1,796 participants in 1 patient group

4 Corners Rural Cancer Prevention
Experimental group
Description:
Four separate Facebook groups, which provide information via posts within the private groups about cancer risk factors (e.g. reducing alcohol consumption, tobacco use cessation, increasing physical activity), behavioral skills to reduce them, benefits of, social support for, and ways to reduce social/financial costs of cancer prevention, and advice from health care providers to decrease barriers. Posts will seek to improve self- and response-efficacy and perceived risk, and link cancer prevention to personal goals.
Treatment:
Behavioral: 4 Corners Rural Health Cancer Prevention

Trial contacts and locations

5

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Central trial contact

Alishia Kinsey; David Buller, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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