2008 — 2010 |
Banyard, Victoria L |
R01Activity Code Description: To support a discrete, specified, circumscribed project to be performed by the named investigator(s) in an area representing his or her specific interest and competencies. |
Enhancing Bystander Efficacy to Prevent Sexual Violence: Extending Primary Preven @ University of New Hampshire
[unreadable] Description (Provided by Applicant) Importance: While programs addressing youth violence have multiplied and have been subjected to increased empirical evaluation, less has been done to evaluate primary prevention of sexual violence, particularly in the high risk environment of college campuses. Prevention science has demonstrated that prevention messages must begin at an early age and need to be reiterated throughout secondary and post-secondary education. This is especially true for sexual violence, which peaks during the college years. [unreadable] Objective: To extend and evaluate promising preliminary work on preventing sexual violence by using a pro-social bystander approach (Research objective 1B in the current RFA), training and empowering first year college students to actively intervene before, during, and after the occurrence of risky situations in order to ultimately reduce relationship violence. We hypothesize that participants receiving the intervention will consequently manifest reduced acceptance of rape myths, reduction in norms supporting dating violence, increased bystander efficacy, and increased bystander behaviors as well as lower assault proclivity and lower victimization. These gains will be in comparison to a control group which does not receive the program and has lesser exposure to social marketing messages [unreadable] Study Design: The proposed study will use a multi-method approach, a technique strongly recommended in the prevention science literature. It builds on earlier work by this research team which has conducted the first experimental evaluation of a comprehensive bystander program and community-wide bystander-oriented social marketing campaign. We will empirically evaluate the efficacy of two forms of primary prevention: 1) a multi-session, in-person prevention program, and 2) a bystander-oriented social marketing campaign. The research will examine both the independent and combined effects of each preventative strategy. [unreadable] Participants: Seven hundred participants across two college campuses will be used to evaluate the in-person program. They will be recruited from the pool of first year students on each campus and will be randomly assigned to either the prevention or control groups, and will be followed longitudinally for up to 12 months. [unreadable] Settings: Participants will be drawn from two very different college campuses (one campus that is primarily a rural residential campus and another which is a more urban, diverse, commuter school). On both campuses there will be specific focus on the high risk groups of first year college students. Both university communities will be exposed to the bystander-oriented social marketing campaign. Ten percent of each campus will answer questions on their exposure to the social marketing campaign and its impact on their attitudes and behaviors. [unreadable] Interventions: Two methods of prevention will be assessed individually and together in the proposed study. One is a multi-session, in-person educational program that uses active learning strategies and best practices from theory and research on prevention (including the Health Belief Model and founding work on bystander prevention) to teach participants how to be empowered bystanders before, during, or after instances of relationship violence (particularly sexual assault). The second method of prevention, the bystander-oriented social marketing campaign will consist of a multi-method campaign portraying bystander behavior. The "tag line" for the social marketing campaign is "know your power, step in, speak up, you can make a difference." The research team will "blanket" each university with three types of mixed media for 30 days during the first and second year of the proposed research. The first component of the mixed bystander-oriented social marketing campaign is a series of four posters portraying "typical" college scenes explicitly modeling bystander behavior in the prevention of violence against women. The second component of the social marketing campaign consists of "tail-wrapping" eight campus-based shuttle buses with life-size posters of the four social marketing campaign posters. The third campaign component will include products displaying the social marketing campaign tag line, "know your power, step in, speak up, you can make a difference." The marketing products will be distributed to all first year students. It is an important feature of our bystander prevention program model that certain aspects of the program and social marketing campaign are specific to the community in which they are implemented (e.g., students modeling in the posters, examples of incidents of sexual and relationship violence discussed in the in-person program). [unreadable] Outcomes: Outcome measures draw from best practices in sexual violence and dating violence prevention to date, including specific measures of bystander attitudes, efficacy, decisional processes, and actual social behaviors. Measures also include peer norms, rape myth acceptance, and measures of behavioral intent to commit sexual assault and a measure of victimization. The research team believes that effective community based prevention that finds roles for all community members to play in reducing sexual and relationship violence is a key component of primary prevention efforts. The proposed research will enable us to replicate our work in this area on a larger scale in two very different communities serving college-age individuals. [unreadable] [unreadable] [unreadable] [unreadable]
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1 |
2015 — 2020 |
Banyard, Victoria L |
U01Activity Code Description: To support a discrete, specified, circumscribed project to be performed by the named investigator(s) in an area representing his or her specific interest and competencies. |
Prevention At the Outer Layers of the Ecology: Greendot to Build Collective Efficacy and Change Injunctive Norms @ University of New Hampshire
? DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Because intimate partner violence (IPV) and sexual assault (SA) are major public health concerns, primary prevention strategies at all levels of the social ecology are critical. To date, however, there are few community- level IPV and SA prevention efforts that have been developed, implemented, and rigorously evaluated. The proposed study will test the effectiveness of a novel, community-level strategy (i.e., GreenDot Community) for preventing both IPV and SA. A quasi-experimental methodology will be utilized such that two communities will receive no intervention, one community will receive community-based components of GreenDot (i.e., bystander trainings), and two communities will receive the community-based components in addition to capacity building for social marketing campaign and action events hypothesized to be the catalysts of change for collective efficacy and injunctive norms. To evaluate the impacts of the community-level interventions, baseline data will be collected through multiple methods during year one of the grant and post-intervention data will be collected during year four of the grant. Multiple methods of data collection will be utilized and include: random-digit dial survey of adults, a school-based survey of adolescents (in addition to utilization of YRBS data specific to schools in participating communities), observation of hot spots, concept mapping, and content coding of social media sites. Analyses will determine if the community-level intervention leads to reductions in community rates of IPV and SA, in addition to determining the key mediating variables of these outcomes (i.e., increase collective efficacy and shift injunctive norms to be intolerant of gender-based violence) as well as moderation variables (e.g., demographic variables and community readiness). Ultimately the proposed project will shed light on whether a novel community-level IPV and SV prevention effort reduces rates of IPV and SV in communities (as well as mediating and moderating effects of such potential outcomes); if proven effective, GreenDot community could be used by communities across the U.S. in efforts to reduce gender-based violence.
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1 |
2016 — 2018 |
Banyard, Victoria L Edwards, Katie M. |
U01Activity Code Description: To support a discrete, specified, circumscribed project to be performed by the named investigator(s) in an area representing his or her specific interest and competencies. |
Preventing Sexual Violence Through a Comprehensive, Peer-Led Initiative: a Process and Outcome Evaluation @ University of New Hampshire
Project Summary Research consistently underscores the concerning rates and deleterious consequences of sexual violence (SV) and related forms of violence among youth. Yet, there are few prevention initiatives that lead to reductions in SV. At the same time, there is increasing recognition that youth violence prevention efforts may be most effective if youth are central to the development and implementation of such efforts. Problematically, there are no rigorously evaluated youth-led SV prevention efforts. The proposed project has the potential for high public health impact by establishing a project team inclusive of researchers, practitioners, educators, and peer opinion leaders who seek to implement and conduct a quasi-experimental and process evaluation of one of the largest youth-led violence prevention initiatives: Peer Solutions' STAND & SERVE (S&S). Although in need of rigorous evaluation, because S&S has been in Phoenix for two decades and is well-integrated throughout the city, it would be difficult to measure the impact of this initiative in Phoenix at this point in time. Furthermore, it is important from a scalability, replicability, and dissemination perspective to document the process by which such efforts are created, initially implemented, and sustained. The South Dakota (SD) Department of Health, a Rape Prevention Education-funded agency, has expressed a strong interest in enhancing their efforts by adding a peer-led SV prevention initiative. Thus, researchers at the University of New Hampshire, in partnership with the SD Network Against Family Violence and Sexual Assault, SD Department of Public Health, Peer Solutions, and Rapid City Area Schools seek to implement and evaluate S&S in middle and high schools within Rapid City, SD. Following refinement of the S&S through focus groups, key informant and stakeholder interviews, and input from a Research and Programming Advisory Board (RPAB), we will conduct a quasi-experimental evaluation of S&S with middle and high school youth to determine the effectiveness of S&S in reducing rates of SV perpetration and increasing bystander actions and reducing other problematic behaviors (e.g., bullying, suicidality). Mediators (e.g., increases in positive youth development) and moderators (e.g., school climate) of outcomes will be examined. In addition to collecting survey data from middle and high school youth, we will collect survey data from school staff and parents/guardians and capture social media data to track diffusion of prevention messages. Finally process evaluation data will include observations and fidelity assessments of S&S programming, daily diary data and interview data from program facilitators and other key informants and stakeholders, and a cost-analysis of implementing S&S to inform replication, dissemination, scalability, and sustainability efforts. If S&S is deemed effective, the products (e.g., manuals, toolkits) that results from this project can be readily disseminated to communities across the U.S. who wish to implement and sustain a theoretically-grounded, multi-level, youth-led SV prevention initiative.
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1 |
2019 |
Banyard, Victoria L |
U01Activity Code Description: To support a discrete, specified, circumscribed project to be performed by the named investigator(s) in an area representing his or her specific interest and competencies. |
Ce15-003, Evaluating Practice-Based Sexual Violence Primary Prevention Approaches From Cdc's Rape Prevention @ The State University of New Jersey Rutge |
0.966 |