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Translating an In-Person Brief, Bystander Bullying Intervention (STAC) to a Technology-Based Intervention

K

Klein Buendel

Status

Completed

Conditions

Bullying of Child
Bullying

Treatments

Behavioral: STAC

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04681495
325
1R41MD014943-01 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

School interventions to reduce bullying can be effective but also require substantial time and resources. Online technologies have the potential to deliver effective bullying interventions to a large number of middle schools for less cost. The feasibility of delivering the effective STAC bullying intervention through a mobile web app will be tested using a needs analysis with school administrators, focus groups with middle school students, and development and usability testing of a prototype.

Full description

While studies support the efficacy of comprehensive, school-wide interventions in reducing bullying, these types of programs can require significant time and financial resources for implementation, resulting in barriers to providing school-based bullying prevention, especially in low-income and rural communities. Additionally, although training bystanders to act as "defenders" on behalf of targets of bullying is an important intervention component, few programs include this as part of their comprehensive strategy. Brief programs that focus on bystander training and require fewer resources are needed to reduce bullying and its negative consequences. The PI (Dr. Midgett) developed STAC, a brief, stand-alone bullying bystander intervention for middle school students, to reduce bullying and mental health risks for bystanders. Brief, in-person programs, however, still pose implementation barriers such as training school personnel, providing external support, and not allowing for large groups of students to be trained at the same time. For this project, we propose to develop a technology-based STAC intervention (STAC-T) that will allow students to customize their experience by selecting avatars and bullying scenarios based on our previous studies conducted in a range of middle schools, including those in low-income and rural communities. The innovative, user-centered design proposed will be inherently sensitive to cultural needs of students and identify personally-appropriate strategies. The specific aims of this application include conducting a needs analysis to determine product need, building a system prototype leveraging prior work and expertise of an external advisory board, and usability and effectiveness testing with middle school students and stakeholders to evaluate feasibility. This proposal is designed to document proof of concept and finalizing design and content of the system which will be developed and tested in a subsequent randomized controlled trial. The technology-based platform will increase the overall reach, impact, and sustainability of the STAC intervention for bullying prevention. It will substantially reduce cost to increase reach and its interactivity and algorithms can tailor program content to adapt it further for students attending low-income and rural schools. Thus, this low-cost, easy to disseminate technology-based bullying bystander intervention has the potential to have a substantial impact on the problem of bullying and the negative associated consequences for both students who are targets and bystanders in middle school when the problem of bullying peaks. There is a large market for the STAC-T intervention with approximately 100,000 public and private schools with middle-school grades in the United States. Globally, the online education market is growing at 10% a year and the digital health market exceeds $220 billion annually.

Enrollment

52 patients

Sex

All

Ages

11 to 80 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria (Students):

  • Enrolled in grades 6, 7, 8, or 9 in a middle/junior high school in Idaho.
  • Have a desire to make a positive difference at school, be mature, and have ability to positively engage socially with peers and adults as judged by school personnel.
  • Speaks and reads English
  • Parent consents and students assents for participation

Inclusion Criteria (School Personnel)

  • Employed in a middle/junior high school in Idaho with grades 6, 7, 8, and/or 9.
  • Employed as a principal, teacher, or school counselor
  • Speaks and reads English
  • Consents to participate

Exclusion Criteria (Students):

  • Participated in a previous study on STAC
  • Speaks and reads only a language other than English
  • Does not consent/assent

Exclusion Criteria (School Personnel):

  • Participated in a previous study on STAC
  • Speaks and reads only a language other than English
  • Does not consent/assent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

52 participants in 1 patient group

Usability of Bullying Prevention Online Application
Other group
Description:
This intervention has a single arm. It consists of conducting focus groups and usability testing of a bullying prevention online application for middle-school-aged students.
Treatment:
Behavioral: STAC

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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