This study targets two major risk factors for cancer; is designed to treat the behaviors on a population basis, using proactive recruitment strategies; intervenes on multiple behaviors simultaneously, thereby producing greater impacts for cancer prevention; utilizes one of the most promising approaches to low cost population based interventions for health-related behavior change, namely the internet; and develops and tests a promising new approach to increasing the utilization and effectiveness of internet-based interventions, relational agents. The primary aims are: (1) To develop and assess the effectiveness of a tailored internet intervention on a national sample; (2) To develop and assess the effectiveness of the internet intervention enhanced by a relational agent; and (3) To determine if the intervention with the relational agent can outperform the regular tailored internet intervention.
The overarching goal of this research project is to revise and enhance a multimedia computer-based multiple risk factor intervention for cancer prevention, using the internet to reach a general population. Two innovative, individualized, easily disseminated, low-cost, and interactive interventions, both for multiple behaviors (sun protection and exercise adoption), will be developed and evaluated in comparison to a control condition. The first intervention involves adapting our effective multimedia expert system interventions to the internet environment. The second intervention builds on the first with the additional inclusion of a Relational Agent, a recently developed computer-based approach to establishing a personal relationship typically missing on internet sites. Both systems will employ the same theoretical model of behavior change, the Transtheoretical Model, as the deep knowledge, and all systems will employ empirically based decision rules. The design is a 3 Group (Control, Internet, Internet plus Relational Agent) x 3 Occasions (0, 12, 24 • Months) with intervention occurring during the first 12 months. A representative national sample of 1639 individuals at risk for both behaviors will be recruited. The primary aims are: (1) To develop and assess the effectiveness of a tailored internet intervention on a national sample; (2) To develop and assess the effectiveness of the internet intervention enhanced by a relational agent; and (3) To determine if the intervention with the relational agent can outperform the regular tailored internet intervention. The secondary aims are: (1) To determine if the two interventions are differentially effective with each behavior and with different subgroups, and (2) To determine if the relational agent intervention is utilized more often for increasing exercise than for sun protection. This study targets two major risk factors for cancer; is designed to treat the behaviors on a population basis, using proactive recruitment strategies; intervenes on multiple behaviors simultaneously, thereby producing greater impacts for cancer prevention; utilizes one of the most promising approaches to low cost population based interventions for health-related behavior change, namely the internet; and develops and tests a promising new approach to increasing the utilization and effectiveness of internet-based interventions, relational agents.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
1,364
The Tailored Internet Intervention will include a "relational agent" component, which is an animated conversational agent that builds a working relationship with subjects over time and uses this alliance to boost intervention effectiveness and retention to the Tailored Internet Communications web site.
Best practices for TTM tailored communications with two types of feedback: normative - compared to peers and ipsative - self compared to previous assessment.
University of Rhode Island
Kingston, Rhode Island, United States
Exercise
Regular Exercise is defined as any planned physical activity (e.g., brisk walking, aerobics, jogging, bicycling, swimming, rowing, basketball, etc.) performed to increase physical fitness. Such activity should be performed 5 times or more per week for 30 minutes per session, consistent with CDC guidelines.
Time frame: Percentage of baseline at-risk participants who reach the Regular Exercise criteria at 24 months.
Sun Exposure
Consistently protecting themselves from the sun every time they were out in the sun for 15+ minutes is defined as 1) using sunscreens with a sun protection factor (SPF) of 15 or more, wearing protective clothing (for example, a hat with a wide brim, shirts, and pants), and avoiding or limiting exposure to the sun during the mid-day hours (10 am - 4 pm).
Time frame: Percentage of baseline at-risk participants who reach the Sun Protection criteria at 24 months
Exercise
Time frame: Increase in number of minutes of physical activity per week (150 minutes of moderate intensity or 75 minutes of vigorous intensity) measured by the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAT)
Sun Exposure
Time frame: Increase in number of sun protection behaviors as measured by the Sun Protection Behavior Scale (SPBS), which consists of three scales: sunscreen use, sun avoidance and protective clothing, and hat use.
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