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Theoretical mediators of GlobalConsent: An adapted web-based sexual violence prevention program for university men in Vietnam

Sexual violence remains a global problem that disproportionately affects women. Though sexual violence interventions exist, few have been implemented in low- or middle-income countries, and none in Vietnam for young men. We adapted a sexual violence prevention intervention (RealConsent) developed fo...

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Published in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2022-11, Vol.313, p.115402-115402, Article 115402
Main Authors: Yount, Kathryn M., Bergenfeld, Irina, Anderson, Katherine M., Trang, Quach Thu, Sales, Jessica M., Cheong, Yuk Fai, Minh, Tran Hung
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description Sexual violence remains a global problem that disproportionately affects women. Though sexual violence interventions exist, few have been implemented in low- or middle-income countries, and none in Vietnam for young men. We adapted a sexual violence prevention intervention (RealConsent) developed for college men in the U.S. and conducted a randomized controlled trial of the adapted intervention (GlobalConsent) with college men in Vietnam. We assessed the effects of GlobalConsent on sexually violent behavior and prosocial bystander behavior, directly and through theoretically targeted mediators. The study design entailed a double-blind, parallel intervention-control-group design in two universities. Consenting heterosexual or bisexual men 18–24 years starting university in September 2019 (n = 793) completed a baseline survey and were assigned with 1:1 randomization to GlobalConsent or attention control. Both programs were web-based and lasted 12 weeks. Path analysis was performed to study the mediating effects of cognition/knowledge, beliefs/attitudes, affect, and efficacy/intention variables measured at six months on sexually violent behavior and prosocial bystander behavior measured at 12 months. In parallel multiple-mediator models, initiating GlobalConsent lowered the odds of sexually violent behavior mainly indirectly, via knowledge of sexual violence legality and harm and victim empathy and increased the odds of prosocial bystander behavior directly and indirectly, through knowledge of sexual violence legality and harm and bystander capacities. The efficacious direct and indirect effects of GlobalConsent support the cross-cultural applicability of its underlying theory of change and findings from mediation analyses of its sister program RealConsent, suggesting GlobalConsent's national scalability and adaptability across Southeast Asia. •Efficacious sexual-violence-prevention interventions for men are lacking in LMICs.•In college men in Vietnam, we assessed effects of GlobalConsent on mediators and behavior.•GlobalConsent affected sexual violence via knowledge and empathy mediators.•GlobalConsent affected bystander behavior directly and via knowledge and capacity mediators.•GlobalConsent's direct and indirect effects on behavior inform adaptations and scale-up.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115402
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Elsevier; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adolescence and young adulthood
Behavior
Bisexuality
Bystander behavior
Bystanders
Clinical trials
Cognition
College health
College students
Colleges & universities
Efficacy
Empathy
Female
Heterosexuality
Humans
Indirect effects
Internet
Intervention
Knowledge
Legality
Low income groups
Male
Mediation modeling
Men
Path analysis
Prevention
Prevention programs
Prosocial behavior
Quantitative methods
Sex crimes
Sex Offenses - prevention & control
Sexual violence
Students
Technology-mediated health promotion
Universities
Vietnam
Violence
Violent behavior and prevention
Women
Young men
title Theoretical mediators of GlobalConsent: An adapted web-based sexual violence prevention program for university men in Vietnam
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