The overall goal of the 5-year project is to conduct both a process and rigorous outcome evaluation of The Set Me Free Projects (SMFP) READY to Stand (RTS) curriculum with an eye toward widespread dissemination to other U.S. communities, if deemed effective.
Detailed Description: The commercial sexual exploitation of children (CSEC) is a public health crisis in the U.S.1-4 Research has documented risk and protective factors across the social ecology for CSEC,2,5-8 that many perpetrators (traffickers, clients, recruiters) of CSEC are peers (e.g., romantic partners) 9-11 and adolescents report opportunities to intervene in situations of peer victimization (although not necessarily specific to CSEC).12-14 Prevention efforts with adolescents that seek to (1) reduce risk for CSEC perpetration; (2) reduce risk for CSEC victimization; and (3) increase positive bystander intervention in situations of CSEC is urgently needed. Thus, the goal of this multi-stakeholder collaboration-that includes researchers, educators, practitioners, and youth-is to conduct both a process and rigorous outcome evaluation of The Set Me Free Project's© (SMFP) READY to Stand (RTS)© curriculum-with an eye toward widespread dissemination to other U.S. communities, if deemed effective. This project is responsive to Research Priority Area 4 (preventing CSEC as a form of CSA) of RFA-CE-22-003. The implementation site includes eight high schools in Des Moines Public Schools (DMPS); students (naïve to the RTS curriculum) are largely racial/ethnic minority (65%) and low-income (76%). DMPS leadership have expressed a growing concern about the CSEC in their district and are eager to partner with researchers to rigorously evaluate the RTS curriculum. The RTS curriculum includes four, 45-minute modules implemented to high school students in mixed gender groups of \~25 students and provides students with psychoeducation on CSEC, healthy relationship skills training, identification of safe people/resources, and programming components to enhance valuing of self and others. As part of the proposed project, the RTS curriculum will be enhanced with two additional 45-minute modules on bystander intervention training in situations of CSEC and shifting school norms to be intolerant of all forms of violence, including CSEC. Additionally, school personnel participate in an enhanced (from 90 minutes to 120 minutes) training to equip them with skills to effectively respond to students' disclosures of CSEC and to reinforce programming messages. The RTS curriculum may also reduce other forms of violence such as teen dating violence (TDV) given it addresses risk and protective factors for multiple forms of violence. Despite its potential for reducing CSEC, the RTS curriculum has never been evaluated. Specific Aims are as follows: Refinement and Planning Phase (Component A): Convene a Research Advisory Board (RAB) that includes researchers, practitioners, educators, caregivers, and youth who will provide input on all research components of the project (Aim 1a). Conduct focus groups with students (n=80) and school personnel (n=60) to inform the refinement of the RTS curriculum and research procedures for Component B (Aim 1b). Enhance the existing RTS program manual and create a training manual to ensure consistent implementation, produce training manuals for use in subsequent clinical trials and dissemination, and develop fidelity measures (Aim 1c). Develop via cognitive interviews (n=20 youth, n=10 school personnel) and surveys (n=878) with students valid, reliable, and developmentally appropriate measures of CSEC perpetration, CSEC victimization, and CSEC bystander opportunity/action to be used in subsequent research, including Component B (Aim 1d). Conduct an open pilot trial of the RTS curriculum in one of the five traditional high schools and one of the three alternative schools in DMPS with students (n=878) and school personnel (n=78) to gain experience with the recruitment and assessment procedures and administration of the intervention; assess acceptability and safety of the research protocols; document initial trends, effect sizes, and CSEC incidence rates; and refine the intervention and research procedures in preparation for Component B (Aim 1e). Apply for additional funding under Component B and disseminate findings to diverse audiences in collaboration with the RAB (Aim 1f). All procedures for Component B will be ready for implementation by the end of Component A funding. Rigorous Evaluation Phase (Component B): Conduct a quasi-experimental study in which four traditional high schools in DMPS and two alternative high schools (not including the two high schools that participated in Component A) are demographically matched and randomly assigned to treatment or wait-list control conditions. Students (n=7,241) will complete baseline and 6-, 12-, and 18-month follow-up surveys to test the hypothesis that participation in the RTS program will lead to reductions in CSEC perpetration (primary outcome), as well as reductions in CSEC victimization and TDV and sexual violence victimization and perpetration and increases in bystander intervention in CSEC situations compared to participants in the waitlist control condition (secondary outcomes) (Aim 2a). We will assess mediators and demographic moderators of program impact (Aim 2b). Document via program observations of student and school personnel programming (Aim 2c), post-session surveys (n=7,241 students; n=396 school personnel) (Aim 2d), and post-program implementation key informant and stakeholder interviews (n=40: program facilitators \[n=10\], students \[n=20\], school personnel \[n=10\]) (Aim 2e) variations in implementation, unanticipated challenges, lessons learned, and perceptions of program impact. Determine costs associated with the program implementation (both student and school personnel programming) to inform future economic evaluation of the RTS curriculum (Aim 2f). Refine and assess validity and reliability of school personnel's' CSEC prevention related knowledge, attitudes, and skills (Aim 1g). Examine the preliminary impact of the RTS school personnel training curriculum on CSEC prevention related knowledge, attitudes, and skills as well as acceptability and perceptions of impact (Aim 1h).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
356
Students will receive the RTS programming over six consecutive school days, spread over two weeks. The program is delivered in mixed-gender groups of 20 to 40 students and includes videos, small and large group discussions, activities, worksheets, and ample opportunities for skill-building. This curriculum is intended to be one piece of comprehensive prevention strategies that has the potential to make immediate and sustained impacts on reducing rates of CSEC perpetration in the lives of youth, including those most vulnerable to this pernicious crime.
[a school district in the Midwest]
Des Moines, Iowa, United States
Commercial Sexual Exploitation Children (CSEC) Perpetration (STUDENT Reported)
For the initial pool of items, we identified existing CSEC perpetration items from The National Study on Adolescent to Adult Health (ADD Health; Franchino-Olsen et al., 2021) and The My Life My Choices evaluation study (Rothman et al., 2021). The scale consists of 21 statements and response options included yes, no, or I do not want to answer this question. A total score is calculated from the sum of the items, with higher scores reflective of a higher sex trafficking perpetration experiences in the past month.
Time frame: 1-month post RTS delivery
Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children (CSEC) Victimization (STUDENT Reported)
For the initial pool of items, we identified existing CSEC victimization items from The National Study on Adolescent to Adult Health (ADD Health; Franchino-Olsen et al., 2021) and The My Life My Choices evaluation study (Rothman et al., 2021). The scale consists of 21 statements and response options included yes, no, or I do not want to answer this question. A total score is calculated from the sum of the items, with higher scores reflective of a higher sex trafficking victimization experiences in the past month.
Time frame: One-month post RTS delivery
Bystander Readiness to Help (STUDENT Reported)
The bystander readiness to help scale was based on the denial subscale of the readiness to help scale (D-RHS; Banyard et al., 2014) to assess students's awareness of and willingness to engage in prevention efforts regarding CSE among high school students in their school district. These items have similarly been adapted for measuring opinions regarding relationship abuse and/or sexual assault among high school students (Edwards et al., 2018). The scale consists of four statements using a 4-point Likert scale (1 = strongly agree to 4 = strongly disagree). A total score is calculated from the average of the items, with higher scores reflective of a greater sense of need and the willingness to engage.
Time frame: One-month post RTS delivery
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Sexual Assault Victimization (STUDENT Reported)
Behaviorally worded items to assess students' self-reports of experiencing past month sexual assault victimization, with items adapted from Cook-Craig et al. (2014). The scale consists of 4 items with response options (1=Yes, 0=No, and -999=I don't want to answer). The original scale has response options ranging from 0-4 (0=0 times, 4=10+ times). A total score is calculated from taking a count of items with a response of "yes", with scores ranging from 0-4. Higher scores indicate more instances of sexual assault victimization having occurred.
Time frame: 1-month post RTS delivery
Sexual Assault Perpetration (STUDENT Reported)
Behaviorally worded items to assess students' self-reports of experiencing past month sexual assault perpetration, with items adapted from Cook-Craig et al. (2014). The scale consists of 4 items with response options (1=Yes, 0=No, and -999=I don't want to answer). The original scale has response options ranging from 0-4 (0=0 times, 4=10+ times). A total score is calculated from taking a count of items with a response of "yes", with scores ranging from 0-4. Higher scores indicate more instances of sexual assault perpetration having occurred.
Time frame: One-month post RTS delivery
Sexual Harassment Victimization (STUDENT Reported)
Behaviorally worded items to assess past month students' self-reports of experiencing sexual harassment victimization. Items adapted from American Association of University Women Educational Foundation (2001, p.21). The scale consists of 2 items with response options (1=Yes, 0=No, and -999=I don't want to answer). A total score is calculated from taking a count of items with a response of "yes", with scores ranging from 0-2. Higher scores indicate more instances of sexual harrassment victimization having occurred.
Time frame: 1-month post RTS delivery
Sexual Harassment Perpetration (STUDENT Reported)
Behaviorally worded items to assess past month students' self-reports of experiencing sexual harassment perpetration. Items adapted from American Association of University Women Educational Foundation (2001, p.21). The scale consists of 2 items with response options (1=Yes, 0=No, and -999=I don't want to answer). A total score is calculated from taking a count of items with a response of "yes", with scores ranging from 0-2. Higher scores indicate more instances of sexual harrassment perpetration having occurred.
Time frame: 1-month post RTS delivery
Stalking Victimization (STUDENT Reported)
Behaviorally worded items to assess students' past month self-reports of experiencing stalking victimization, with items adapted from(Cook-Craig et al. 2014). The scale consists of 3 items with response options (1=Yes, 0=No, and -999=I don't want to answer). The original scale has response options ranging from 0-4 (0=0 times, 4=10+ times). A total score is calculated from taking a count of items with a response of "yes", with scores ranging from 0-3. Higher scores indicate more instances of stalking victimization having occurred.
Time frame: 1-month post RTS delivery
Stalking Perpetration (STUDENT Reported)
Behaviorally worded items to assess students' past month self-reports of experiencing stalking perpetration, with items adapted from(Cook-Craig et al. 2014). The scale consists of 3 items with response options (1=Yes, 0=No, and -999=I don't want to answer). The original scale has response options ranging from 0-4 (0=0 times, 4=10+ times). A total score is calculated from taking a count of items with a response of "yes", with scores ranging from 0-3. Higher scores indicate more instances of stalking perpetration having occurred.
Time frame: 1-month post RTS delivery
Dating Violence Victimization (STUDENT Reported)
The Measure of Adolescent Relationship Harassment and Abuse (MARSHA; Rothman et al. 2020) was used to assess past month dating violence victimization. The scale consists of two subscales, Physical abuse (7 items) and Isolation (3 items), with response options of 1=Yes, 0=No, and -999=I don't want to answer. A total score is calculated from the counting the nunber of items answers as "yes". Higher scores indicate more instances of dating violence victimization having occurred.
Time frame: 1-month post RTS delivery
Dating Violence Perpetration (STUDENT Reported)
The Measure of Adolescent Relationship Harassment and Abuse (MARSHA; Rothman et al. 2020) was used to assess past month dating violence perpetration. The scale consists of two subscales, Physical abuse (7 items) and Isolation (3 items), with response options of 1=Yes, 0=No, and -999=I don't want to answer. A total score is calculated from the counting the nunber of items answers as "yes". Higher scores indicate more instances of dating violence perpetration having occurred.
Time frame: 1-month post RTS delivery
Youth Violence (STUDENT Reported)
The Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBS; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2019) was used to measure past month physical fights, fear of going to school, and weapon carrying. The scale consisted of 4 items with response options of 1=Yes, 0=No, and -999=I don't want to answer. A total score is calculated from the counting the nunber of items answers as "yes". Higher scores indicate more instances of youth violence having occurred.
Time frame: 1-month post RTS delivery
Depression (STUDENT Reported)
The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) modified (Johnson et al. 2002) was used to measure past two week depression. The scale consisted of 8 items with response options from Not at all (0) to Nearly every day (3) and I don't want to answer (-999). The toal score is calculated from the average of the items, with higher scores representing higher depression symptoms.
Time frame: 1-month post RTS delivery
Academic & Career Commitment (STUDENT Reported)
Items from Hulsey et al. (2022) were used to measures students intentions on graduating high school/getting a GED as well as having a job/career. The scale consisted of 5 items with response scales from Not at all true of me (1) to Extremely true of me (4) and I don't want to answer this question (-999). The total scores were calculated from the average of the items, with higher scores representing higher academic and career commitment.
Time frame: 1-month post RTS delivery