Alcohol Counter Marketing as a Breast Cancer Prevention Strategy in Young Women
Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center
Summary
This randomized trial aims to test the effects of co-created breast cancer counter marketing intervention messages for reducing alcohol consumption and impacting awareness and beliefs about the breast cancer risks from alcohol consumption in young adult women.
Description
This is an experimental behavioral study that builds upon prior work that engaged young adult women to collaboratively co-create counter marketing intervention content designed for digital media using open artificial intelligence, text-to-image content generation platform during real-time discussions. This study will test the refined and finalized co-created intervention content in a randomized trial by measuring alcohol consumption behavior and awareness and beliefs about the breast cancer risks from alcohol consumption. Participants will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to the intervention arm o…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18–25 years
- Sex
- Female
- Healthy volunteers
- Yes
Inclusion Criteria: * Assigned female at birth. * Age 18-25 at enrollment. * Report drinking alcohol at least once in the past 30 days. * Not pregnant or intending to become pregnant by self-report. * Reside in Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, or New Jersey. * Willing to complete procedures. * Able to complete procedures a, b, or c: 1. Can read, write, and converse in English. 2. Has a personal mobile smartphone with texting capabilities to receive text messages that may contain text and images. 3. For the subsample who will wear the BACTrack sensor, they must have an iPhone. At th…
Interventions
- BehavioralAlcohol and Breast Cancer Risk Messages
Participants will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to the intervention or control arm. In the intervention arm, participants will receive the co-created intervention content. The investigators co-created the intervention content, including visuals and text, through focus groups with young adult women and refined the draft content based on additional feedback from focus groups, thereby ascertaining the views of young adult women. The intervention content aligns with a conceptual framework and includes messaging with the following themes: 1) Risks of breast cancer from alcohol consumption; 2) Efficacy content promoting behavior change; 3) Relevance to young adult women; 4) Mechanisms through which alcohol consumption increases breast cancer risk; 5) Exposing the alcohol industry's deceptive marketing practices; 6) Comparisons to other behavioral risk factors for cancer.
- BehavioralSkin Cancer Risk Messages
Participants in the control arm will receive text only content about skin cancer risk and prevention. This is based on intervention trials in other cancer prevention areas (e.g., tobacco) where the investigators used this type of control, provides a contact-matched comparison relative to the intervention arm, and ensures consistency of the protocol (e.g., timing of completion and content of measures to be completed) across the trial arms.
Location
- Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer CenterColumbus, Ohio