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The Closing Digital Divide: Delivery Modality and Family Attendance in the Pathways for African American Success (PAAS) Program

Although family-focused, evidence-based programs (EBPs) have the potential to reduce disparities in health and behavioral outcomes for youth, access to such programs is severely limited in the most affected areas, including African American communities in the rural South. As expanding the reach of E...

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Published in:Prevention science 2018-07, Vol.19 (5), p.642-651
Main Authors: Murry, Velma McBride, Berkel, Cady, Liu, Na
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Language:English
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description Although family-focused, evidence-based programs (EBPs) have the potential to reduce disparities in health and behavioral outcomes for youth, access to such programs is severely limited in the most affected areas, including African American communities in the rural South. As expanding the reach of EBPs is the primary goal of translational research, interest is growing in the potential of technology as a viable platform to disseminate services to areas with limited resources. To test whether African American families in the rural South would be willing to engage in a technology-based family-focused EBP to prevent adolescent risk behavior, we examined attendance using data from two arms of a three-arm community-based trial of the Pathways for African American Success (PAAS) program. In the overall study, sixth graders ( N  = 412) and their primary caregivers were randomly assigned to the following conditions: (a) in-person, small group sessions led by facilitators; (b) self-directed, technology-based sessions; or (c) a literature control with home-mailed educational materials. Results indicated that attendance was higher in the technology condition than in the small group condition. Parental age, education, and socioeconomic status did not limit attendance in the technology condition. We conclude from these results that the use of technology can be an acceptable strategy for disseminating parenting EBPs to African American families in the rural South.
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subjects Access to Information
Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior
African Americans
At risk youth
Attendance
Caregivers
Child
Child and School Psychology
Digital Divide
Educational materials
Families & family life
Family Relations
Health behavior
Health care policy
Health disparities
Health Promotion
Health Psychology
Health status
Humans
Internet access
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Parenting
Parents & parenting
Prevention programs
Preventive Medicine
Public Health
Risk behavior
Risk-Taking
Rural areas
Rural communities
Rural Population
Socioeconomic status
Southeastern United States
Technology
Youth
title The Closing Digital Divide: Delivery Modality and Family Attendance in the Pathways for African American Success (PAAS) Program
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