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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Public Health and Surveillance

Date Submitted: Mar 3, 2018
Open Peer Review Period: Mar 3, 2018 - May 29, 2018
Date Accepted: May 29, 2018
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Facial-Aging Mobile Apps for Smoking Prevention in Secondary Schools in Brazil: Appearance-Focused Interventional Study

Bernardes-Souza B, Patruz Ananias De Assis Pires F, Madeira GM, Felício Da Cunha Rodrigues T, Gatzka M, Heppt MV, Omlor AJ, Enk AH, Groneberg DA, Seeger W, von Kalle C, Berking C, Corrêa PCRP, Suhre JL, Alfitian J, Assis A, Brinker TJ

Facial-Aging Mobile Apps for Smoking Prevention in Secondary Schools in Brazil: Appearance-Focused Interventional Study

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2018;4(3):e10234

DOI: 10.2196/10234

PMID: 30021713

PMCID: 6068381

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Facial-Aging Mobile Apps for Smoking Prevention in Secondary Schools in Brazil: Appearance-Focused Interventional Study

  • Breno Bernardes-Souza; 
  • Francisco Patruz Ananias De Assis Pires; 
  • Gustavo Moreira Madeira; 
  • Túlio Felício Da Cunha Rodrigues; 
  • Martina Gatzka; 
  • Markus V Heppt; 
  • Albert J Omlor; 
  • Alexander H Enk; 
  • David A Groneberg; 
  • Werner Seeger; 
  • Christof von Kalle; 
  • Carola Berking; 
  • Paulo César Rodrigues Pinto Corrêa; 
  • Janina Leonie Suhre; 
  • Jonas Alfitian; 
  • Aisllan Assis; 
  • Titus Josef Brinker

Background:

Most smokers start smoking during their early adolescence, often with the idea that smoking is glamorous. Interventions that harness the broad availability of mobile phones as well as adolescents' interest in their appearance may be a novel way to improve school-based prevention. A recent study conducted in Germany showed promising results. However, the transfer to other cultural contexts, effects on different genders, and implementability remains unknown.

Objective:

In this observational study, we aimed to test the perception and implementability of facial-aging apps to prevent smoking in secondary schools in Brazil in accordance with the theory of planned behavior and with respect to different genders.

Methods:

We used a free facial-aging mobile phone app (“Smokerface”) in three Brazilian secondary schools via a novel method called mirroring. The students’ altered three-dimensional selfies on mobile phones or tablets and images were “mirrored” via a projector in front of their whole grade. Using an anonymous questionnaire, we then measured on a 5-point Likert scale the perceptions of the intervention among 306 Brazilian secondary school students of both genders in the seventh grade (average age 12.97 years). A second questionnaire captured perceptions of medical students who conducted the intervention and its conduction per protocol.

Results:

The majority of students perceived the intervention as fun (304/306, 99.3%), claimed the intervention motivated them not to smoke (289/306, 94.4%), and stated that they learned new benefits of not smoking (300/306, 98.0%). Only a minority of students disagreed or fully disagreed that they learned new benefits of nonsmoking (4/306, 1.3%) or that they themselves were motivated not to smoke (5/306, 1.6%). All of the protocol was delivered by volunteer medical students.

Conclusions:

Our data indicate the potential for facial-aging interventions to reduce smoking prevalence in Brazilian secondary schools in accordance with the theory of planned behavior. Volunteer medical students enjoyed the intervention and are capable of complete implementation per protocol.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Bernardes-Souza B, Patruz Ananias De Assis Pires F, Madeira GM, Felício Da Cunha Rodrigues T, Gatzka M, Heppt MV, Omlor AJ, Enk AH, Groneberg DA, Seeger W, von Kalle C, Berking C, Corrêa PCRP, Suhre JL, Alfitian J, Assis A, Brinker TJ

Facial-Aging Mobile Apps for Smoking Prevention in Secondary Schools in Brazil: Appearance-Focused Interventional Study

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2018;4(3):e10234

DOI: 10.2196/10234

PMID: 30021713

PMCID: 6068381

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.

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