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Youths' and Parents' Views on the Acceptability and Design of a Video-Based Tobacco Prevention Intervention

NCJ Number
232794
Journal
Journal of Child and Adolescent Substance Abuse Volume: 19 Issue: 5 Dated: November-December 2010 Pages: 391-405
Author(s)
E. Melinda Mahabee-Gittens; Lisa Vaughn; Judith S. Gordon
Date Published
November 2010
Length
15 pages
Annotation
This study evaluated the acceptability by both youth and parents of the video-based tobacco prevention intervention, IMPACT (Improving Parent/Adolescent Communication about Tobacco).
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the acceptability of a brief, video-based parental intervention that modeled parent-child communication about tobacco, delivered within an emergency department (ED) setting. While waiting to be seen by a physician in the ED, 20 parent-youth dyads watched the video together and then private, semi-structured focused interviews were conducted around the "take-home" message and views on the settings, actors, and content of the videos. Dyads agreed that the design, delivery, and content of the video intervention were acceptable, realistic, and useful in providing parental reinforcements about the importance of parent-youth tobacco communication, and the ED was considered to be a good setting for watching the video. Findings support the development and delivery of such an ED intervention and aids in determining content and scenarios for future intervention development. (Published Abstract) Figures and references