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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Mental Health

Date Submitted: Nov 30, 2020
Date Accepted: Mar 16, 2021

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

Efficacy of an mHealth Intervention (BRAVE) to Promote Mental Wellness for American Indian and Alaska Native Teenagers and Young Adults: Randomized Controlled Trial

Craig Rushing S, Kelley A, Bull S, Stephens D, Wrobel J, Silvasstar J, Peterson R, Begay C, Ghost Dog T, McCray C, Love Brown D, Thomas M, Caughlan C, Singer M, Smith P, Sumbundu K

Efficacy of an mHealth Intervention (BRAVE) to Promote Mental Wellness for American Indian and Alaska Native Teenagers and Young Adults: Randomized Controlled Trial

JMIR Ment Health 2021;8(9):e26158

DOI: 10.2196/26158

PMID: 34524092

PMCID: 8482172

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited.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.

Efficacy and Impact of an mHealth Intervention to promote Mental Wellness for American Indian and Alaska Native Teens and Young Adults: A Randomized Controlled Trial of the BRAVE Study

  • Stephanie Craig Rushing; 
  • Allyson Kelley; 
  • Sheana Bull; 
  • David Stephens; 
  • Julia Wrobel; 
  • Joshva Silvasstar; 
  • Roger Peterson; 
  • Corey Begay; 
  • Thomas Ghost Dog; 
  • Celena McCray; 
  • Danica Love Brown; 
  • Morgan Thomas; 
  • Colbie Caughlan; 
  • Michelle Singer; 
  • Paige Smith; 
  • Kanku Sumbundu

ABSTRACT

Background:

Culturally-relevant interventions are needed to help American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) teens and young adults navigate common risky situations involving family and friends, including drug and alcohol misuse, dating violence, and suicidality. We R Native – a multimedia health resource for Native teens and young adults – designed an intervention for Native youth, delivered via text message, that includes role model videos, mental wellness strategies, and links to culturally-relevant resources (hotlines, chat-lines, websites, etc.) and social support.

Objective:

This study aims to test the efficacy of BRAVE to improve participant’s physical, mental, and spiritual health, their use of mental wellness strategies, their help-seeking skills, and associated factors, including cultural resilience, identity, and cultural pride.

Methods:

The randomized controlled trial was carried out by the Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board and the mHealth Impact Lab. The team recruited 2,334 AI/AN teens and young adults nationwide (15-24 years old) via social media channels and text message and enrolled 1,044 to participate. AI/AN teens and young adults enrolled in the study received either: 8 weeks of BRAVE text messages designed to improve mental health, help-seeking skills, and cultural resilience; or 8 weeks of STEM text messages, designed to elevate and re-affirm Native voices in science, technology, engineering, math and medicine (STEM); and then received the other set of messages. Primary and secondary outcomes were tested using linear mixed-effect models and linear regressions.

Results:

A total of 833 AI/AN teens and young adults were included in the analysis. Individuals in the BRAVE and STEM arms showed significant positive trends over the course of the study for all primary outcomes except cultural identity and help seeking behavior. Mean scores were significantly different for health (P<.001), resilience (P<.001), negative coping (P=.027), positive coping (P<.001), self-efficacy (P=.021), and self-esteem (P<.001). Changes in help-seeking self-efficacy were significant for those exhibiting risky behavior at baseline to exit (P=.01). Those who reported positive coping scores at baseline also reported better health on average, but no difference in risky drug and alcohol use (P<.001). The number of participants that used text messages to help themselves increased from 69% at 3-months (427/618) to 75% at 8-months (381/501) (P<.001). Similarly, the number of participants that used text messages to help a friend or family member increased from 22% at 3-months (138/616) to 55% at 8-months (272/498).

Conclusions:

This is the first nationwide randomized controlled trial for AI/AN teens and young adults to test the efficacy of an mHealth intervention on mental wellness. The findings suggest that culturally-relevant multimedia, mHealth interventions can improve help-seeking behavior. Lessons learned from this study may help other AI/AN-serving organizations, prevention programs, policymakers, researchers, and educators as they support the next generation of AI/AN change-makers.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Craig Rushing S, Kelley A, Bull S, Stephens D, Wrobel J, Silvasstar J, Peterson R, Begay C, Ghost Dog T, McCray C, Love Brown D, Thomas M, Caughlan C, Singer M, Smith P, Sumbundu K

Efficacy of an mHealth Intervention (BRAVE) to Promote Mental Wellness for American Indian and Alaska Native Teenagers and Young Adults: Randomized Controlled Trial

JMIR Ment Health 2021;8(9):e26158

DOI: 10.2196/26158

PMID: 34524092

PMCID: 8482172

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