2017
DOI: 10.2196/mental.7839
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The Living the Example Social Media Substance Use Prevention Program: A Pilot Evaluation

Abstract: BackgroundAdolescent substance use rates in rural areas of the United States, such as upstate New York, have risen substantially in recent years, calling for new intervention approaches in response to this trend. The Mentor Foundation USA conducts the Living the Example (LTE) campaign to engage youth in prevention using an experiential approach. As part of LTE, youth create their own prevention messages following a training curriculum in techniques for effective messaging and then share them via social media. … Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Future youth programming should consider this finding and take steps to examine the concordance between youths’ personal brands and the established program brand, and how they intersect. Otherwise, this is a potential barrier for programs that ask youth to use their personal digital networks for dissemination of peer-to-peer prevention messages, such as the Living the Example youth ambassadors drug prevention program [110]. The more limited commenting and sharing by youth in our study may also indicate a potential hesitance among youth to be more actively engaged (sharing and commenting) on fan pages that are potentially viewable by a public audience.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Future youth programming should consider this finding and take steps to examine the concordance between youths’ personal brands and the established program brand, and how they intersect. Otherwise, this is a potential barrier for programs that ask youth to use their personal digital networks for dissemination of peer-to-peer prevention messages, such as the Living the Example youth ambassadors drug prevention program [110]. The more limited commenting and sharing by youth in our study may also indicate a potential hesitance among youth to be more actively engaged (sharing and commenting) on fan pages that are potentially viewable by a public audience.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…While Palestinian children experience trauma on a daily basis through their lived experience of the occupation which leads to substance use, it may still be possible to reduce the harms associated with drug use by emphasising education around types of substances, routes of administration and the effect on mental health. This was recognised by discussion here of the various mediums in which education and awareness could take place, and particularly using social media channels can be a way of cost effectively disseminating health messages to younger people through peer-to-peer sharing (Evans et al 2017). Visits to households by health visitors would also be beneficial but could be labour intensive if not focussed on particular sections of the population; however, training for existing staff around substance use would potentially be a feasible action.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Future youth programming should consider this finding, and take steps to examine the concordance between youths' personal brands and how those intersect with the established program brand. Otherwise, this is a potential barrier for programs that ask youth to utilize their personal digital networks for dissemination of peer-to-peer prevention messages, such as the Living the Example Youth Ambassadors drug prevention program [103]. While results of our campaign formative research suggested that this audience would be interested in social media contests, contest-related posts did not produce significant user engagement.…”
Section: Principal Findingsmentioning
confidence: 74%