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Project RESIST: Increasing Resistance to Tobacco Marketing Among Young Adult Sexual Minority Women Using Inoculation Message Approaches
Not Recruiting
Trial ID: NCT04812795
Purpose
Project RESIST is an R01 study funded by NCI focused on determining the effects of using culturally tailored inoculation approaches to increase resilience to tobacco marketing influences among young adult sexual minority women ages 18-30 and incorporates critical stakeholder inputs that support later adoption and implementation. The study team is utilizing formative research to design and pre-test anti-smoking messages and two national longitudinal online survey experiments.
Official Title
Project RESIST: Increasing Resistance to Tobacco Marketing Among Young Adult Sexual Minority Women Using Inoculation Message Approaches
Stanford Investigator(s)
Mitchell R. Lunn
Associate Professor of Medicine (Nephrology) and, by courtesy, of Epidemiology and Population Health
Juno Obedin-Maliver
Associate Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology (Gynecology & Gynecologic Specialties/Generalist) and, by courtesy, of Epidemiology and Population Health
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
* Ages 18-30
* Woman
* Identifies as a sexual minority (any sexual orientation other than heterosexual)
* Lives in the United States
* Able to take surveys in English
Exclusion Criteria:
* Under 18 or older than 30
* Men
* Heterosexual
* Lives outside the United States
* Unable to take survey in English
Intervention(s):
other: Culturally tailored anti-smoking messages
other: Non-culturally tailored interventions
Not Recruiting
Contact Information
Stanford University
School of Medicine
300 Pasteur Drive
Stanford,
CA
94305
Mitchell Lunn, MD, MAS, FACP, FASN
650-725-7783