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Girl2Girl: Harnessing Text Messaging to Reduce Teenage Pregnancy Among LGB Girls

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Teenage Pregnancy
Interventions
Behavioral: Girl2Girl
Registration Number
NCT03029962
Lead Sponsor
Center for Innovative Public Health Research
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to finalize and rigorously evaluate Girl2Girl, a novel text messaging-based teenage pregnancy prevention (TPP) program designed specifically for LGB women ages 14-18 years, nation-wide. The guiding theoretical model is the Information-Motivation-Behavioral Skills (IMB) Model, which has been used extensively and is associated with increases in TPP behavior.

Detailed Description

An estimated one in four teen women will become pregnant by the time she is 20 years of age. That said, significant disparity in rates exist for lesbian, gay, bisexual and other sexual minority women (LGB) versus non-LGB teen women: Research suggests that lesbian and bisexual teen women are between two and four times more likely to report having been pregnant than teen women who identified as exclusively heterosexual. Despite this compelling evidence that lesbian and bisexual adolescent women are at risk for teen pregnancy, programs tailored to the unique needs of adolescent LGB women are nonexistent. Evidence-based teen pregnancy prevention (TPP) programs targeting LGB teen women are urgently needed.

The Girl2Girl intervention text messaging-based TPP program designed specifically for LGB women ages 14-18 years, nation-wide. The investigators will test the intervention in a randomized control trial (RCT) of 840 LGB teenage women randomly assigned to either the intervention (n = 420) or control (n = 420) arms. Our primary efficacy outcome measures, measured at 12-months post-intervention, will be: (a) abstinence from penile-vaginal sex; (b) condom use during penile-vaginal sex, (c) use of other birth control methods during penile-vaginal sex, and (d) pregnancy.

If effective, Girl2Girl has promise to be quickly and cost-effectively implemented to scale to help to curb the spread of teenage pregnancy among women who identify as LGB.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
948
Inclusion Criteria
  • endorse a non-heterosexual sexual identity (i.e., lesbian/gay, bisexual, queer, questioning, unsure);
  • be cisgender (i.e., be assigned a female sex at birth and endorse a female gender identity);
  • be aged 14-18;
  • in high school or equivalent (including those who did not finish school/dropped out);
  • be English speaking;
  • be exclusive owners of a cell phone with an unlimited text messaging plan;
  • have used text messaging for at least six months;
  • intend to have the same cell number for the next six months; and,
  • be able to provide informed assent, including an acceptable score for "capacity to consent" and the self-safety assessment.
Exclusion Criteria
  • not having the capacity to assent
  • not passing the self-safety assessment
  • previously participating in another study activity (with the exception of the baseline and intervention end survey pilot tests)
  • knowing someone who is already enrolled in the program
  • non-cisgender

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Experimental: Girl2GirlGirl2GirlGirl2Girl is a 7-week teenage pregnancy prevention program delivered daily via text messaging to 14-18 year old females who self-identify as lesbian, bisexual, gay, or other sexual minority. In addition to program content, participants are paired with another participant (i.e., a Text Buddy) with whom they can text throughout the program to provide support; and an on-demand advice line, Girl2Genie, which shares information about sex, relationships, and the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (LGBT) community.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of participants who abstained from penile-vaginal sexPost-intervention (about 20 weeks after randomization)

The relative difference of abstinence (not engaging in vaginal sex) in the intervention versus control group at 12-months post-intervention

Number of participants who used other birth control methodsPost-intervention (about 20 weeks after randomization)

The relative difference of teens who used birth control methods other than condoms (e.g., the pill, the patch) in the intervention versus control group at 12-months post-intervention

Number of protected penile-vaginal sex actsPost-intervention (about 20 weeks after randomization)

The relative difference of protected penile-vaginal sex acts in the intervention versus control group at 12-months post-intervention

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
PregnancyAcross the 12 months post-intervention

The percent of teens who have been pregnant since the beginning of the RCT in the intervention versus control group

Number of participants who used other birth control methodsimmediate post-intervention end, 3-, 6-, 9-months post-intervention

The relative difference of teens who used birth control methods other than condoms (e.g., the pill, the patch) during penile-vaginal sex acts in the intervention versus control group at immediate post-intervention end, 3-, 6-, and 9-months post-intervention

Number of penile-vaginal sex acts during which a condom was usedimmediate post-intervention end, 3-, 6-, 9-months post-intervention

The relative difference of protected penile-vaginal sex acts in the intervention versus control group at immediate post-intervention end, 3-, 6-, and 9-months post-intervention

Number of participants who abstained from penile-vaginal seximmediate post-intervention end, 3-, 6-, 9-months post-intervention

The relative difference of abstinence (not engaging vaginal sex) in the intervention versus control group at immediate post-intervention end, 3-, 6-, and 9-months post-intervention

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Center for Innovative Public Health Research

🇺🇸

San Clemente, California, United States

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