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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Research Protocols

Date Submitted: Jan 23, 2019
Open Peer Review Period: Jan 28, 2019 - Feb 11, 2019
Date Accepted: May 2, 2019
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

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

An Affirmative Coping Skills Intervention to Improve the Mental and Sexual Health of Sexual and Gender Minority Youth (Project Youth AFFIRM): Protocol for an Implementation Study

Craig SL, McInroy LB, Eaton AD, Iacono G, Leung VWY, Austin A, Dobinson C

An Affirmative Coping Skills Intervention to Improve the Mental and Sexual Health of Sexual and Gender Minority Youth (Project Youth AFFIRM): Protocol for an Implementation Study

JMIR Res Protoc 2019;8(6):e13462

DOI: 10.2196/13462

PMID: 31172957

PMCID: 6592518

Project Youth AFFIRM: Protocol for Implementation of an Affirmative Coping Skills Intervention to Improve the Mental and Sexual Health of Sexual and Gender Minority Youth

  • Shelley L Craig; 
  • Lauren B McInroy; 
  • Andrew David Eaton; 
  • Gio Iacono; 
  • Vivian W. Y. Leung; 
  • Ashley Austin; 
  • Cheryl Dobinson

ABSTRACT

Background:

Sexual and Gender Minority Youth (SGMY) (ages 14 – 29) face increased risks to their well-being compared to their cisgender, heterosexual peers—including rejection by family¬¬, exclusion from society, depression, substance use, elevated suicidality and harassment. These perils and a lack of targeted programs for SGMY exacerbate their risk for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) interventions support clients by generating alternative ways of interpreting their problems and beliefs about themselves. CBT, tailored to the experiences of SGMY, may help improve mood and increase coping by teaching youth how to identify, challenge and change maladaptive thoughts, beliefs and behaviours. Based on promising pilot study results, AFFIRM is a CBT-informed group intervention that is being tested in a pragmatic trial to assess its implementation potential.

Objective:

This project is intended to scale-up implementation and delivery of AFFIRM, an eight-session manualized group coping skills intervention focused on reducing sexual risk behaviors and psychosocial distress among SGMY. This project aims to decrease sexual risk-taking, poor mental health and internalized homophobia, and increase levels of sexual self-efficacy and proactive coping among SGMY.

Methods:

SGMY are recruited via flyering at community agencies and organizations, as well as online advertising. Potential participants are assessed for suitability for the group intervention via online screening, and are allocated in a 2:1 fashion to the AFFIRM intervention or a waitlisted control in a stepped wedge waitlist crossover design. The intervention groups are hosted by Collaborating Community Agency Sites (CCASs) (e.g., community health centres and family health teams) across Ontario, Canada. Participants are assessed at pre-wait (if applicable), pre-intervention, post-intervention, 6-month follow-up, and 12-month follow-up for sexual health self-efficacy and capacity, mental health indicators, internalized homophobia, stress appraisal, proactive and active coping, and hope. All data collection occurs online, either independently or at CCASs via tablet. Participants in crisis are assessed using an established distress protocol.

Results:

Data collection is ongoing, with a target sample of 300 participants. It is anticipated that data analyses will use effect size estimates, paired sample t-tests, and repeated measures linear mixed modeling (LMM) using SPSS to test for differences pre and post intervention. Descriptive analyses will summarize data and profile all variables, including internal consistency estimates. Distributional assumptions, univariate, and multivariate normality of all variables will be assessed.

Conclusions:

AFFIRM is a potentially scalable intervention. Many existing community programs provide safe spaces for SGMY, but do not provide skills-based training to deal with the increasingly complex lives of youth. This pragmatic trial could make a significant contribution to the field of intervention research by simultaneously moving AFFIRM into practice and evaluating its impact.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Craig SL, McInroy LB, Eaton AD, Iacono G, Leung VWY, Austin A, Dobinson C

An Affirmative Coping Skills Intervention to Improve the Mental and Sexual Health of Sexual and Gender Minority Youth (Project Youth AFFIRM): Protocol for an Implementation Study

JMIR Res Protoc 2019;8(6):e13462

DOI: 10.2196/13462

PMID: 31172957

PMCID: 6592518

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

© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.