Empirical Development of Brief Smoking Prevention Videotapes Which Target African-American Adolescents
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of the Addictions
- Vol. 30 (9) , 1141-1164
- https://doi.org/10.3109/10826089509055832
Abstract
Two studies are described which provide evaluations for two brief videotapes developed as supplemental materials in the prevention of tobacco use among African-American adolescents. One videotape (the “soap opera”) provides a more general audience-oriented presentation of prevention material and it was filmed primarily at a shopping mall, whereas the other videotape (the “rap”) provides a “hip-hop generation” presentation, and it was filmed primarily at an outdoor hangout. The first study compared the two videotapes against each other. The second study compared the two videotapes combined in the same presentation, controlling for order of presentation, against a discussion group control. The results of the two studies indicated few differences in receptivity to the two videotapes among primarily African-American and Latino young adolescents. The rap videotape was rated as more accurate in its depiction of the African-American lifestyle, although both videotapes were equally liked. When shown together, the videotapes were not found to be superior in decreasing behavioral intention to smoke compared to a discussion group control. No change in trial of smoking was observed within or across conditions measured over a pre-post summer interval. These data suggest that “culturally sensitive” videotapes have no more of a short-term effect on youth than do other types of brief interventions which involve minority implementers.Keywords
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