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Evaluation of the Be Vape Free Curriculum of the Tobacco Prevention Toolkit

Not Applicable
Conditions
E-cigarette Use
Interventions
Behavioral: Stanford Vaping Prevention curriculum
Registration Number
NCT05493982
Lead Sponsor
Stanford University
Brief Summary

The Stanford Tobacco Prevention Toolkit is a free online curriculum developed for use by educators and health professionals in providing tobacco-specific prevention education to middle and high school students. A set of lessons focused on e-cigarette/vaping prevention education specifically is called the Be Vape Free curriculum. The aims of this study are to determine: (1) whether the Be Vape Free curriculum is effective in increasing middle and high school students' resistance to using tobacco and in decreasing positive attitudes towards and intentions to use e-cigarettes; (2) whether the Curriculum is effective in changing middle and high school students' actual use of tobacco; and (3) Examine heterogenous treatment effects identifying groups that benefit the most and those who do not benefit at all from the intervention.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
10800
Inclusion Criteria

Middle school and high school students receiving health education at schools participating in the study

Exclusion Criteria

None

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Receives Stanford vaping prevention curriculum (randomized phase)Stanford Vaping Prevention curriculumStanford vaping prevention curriculum is administered.
Receives Stanford vaping prevention curriculum (pilot phase)Stanford Vaping Prevention curriculumStanford vaping prevention curriculum is administered as pilot arm preceding main experimental intervention.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in e-cigarette useChange from baseline to follow-up at approximately 156 weeks

Investigator-originated survey measures (questions) assess ever e-cigarette use \& past 30-day tobacco use. This outcome measure assesses e-cigarette use.

Change in intention to use of e-cigarettes scaled score as measured by investigator-originated surveyChange from baseline to follow-up at approximately 156 weeks

This survey measures change in intention to use e-cigarettes with questions related to the participant's knowledge of and resistance to use of e-cigarettes.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Stanford University

🇺🇸

Palo Alto, California, United States

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