| Literature DB >> 30693093 |
Rebecca Meiksin1, Elizabeth Allen1, Joanna Crichton2, Gemma S Morgan2, Christine Barter3, Diana Elbourne1, Kate Hunt4, G J Melendez-Torres5, Steve Morris6, H Luz Mc Naughton Reyes7, Joanna Sturgess1, Bruce Taylor8, Honor Young5, Rona Campbell2, Chris Bonell1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dating and relationship violence (DRV)-intimate partner violence during adolescence-encompasses physical, sexual and emotional abuse. DRV is associated with a range of adverse health outcomes including injuries, sexually transmitted infections, adolescent pregnancy and mental health issues. Experiencing DRV also predicts both victimisation and perpetration of partner violence in adulthood.Prevention targeting early adolescence is important because this is when dating behaviours begin, behavioural norms become established and DRV starts to manifest. Despite high rates of DRV victimisation in England, from 22 to 48% among girls and 12 to 27% among boys ages 14-17 who report intimate relationships, no RCTs of DRV prevention programmes have taken place in the UK. Informed by two school-based interventions that have shown promising results in RCTs in the USA-Safe Dates and Shifting Boundaries-Project Respect aims to optimise and pilot a DRV prevention programme for secondary schools in England.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; Cluster randomised trial; Dating and relationship violence; Process evaluation; Realist evaluation; School intervention; Violence prevention
Year: 2019 PMID: 30693093 PMCID: PMC6341537 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-019-0391-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Fig. 1SPIRIT figure for pilot cluster randomised controlled trial of Project Respect
Description of the Project Respect intervention using TIDieR checklist items
| TIDieR Item | Information on Project Respect intervention |
|---|---|
| Brief name | Project Respect |
| Why | We present the theory of change for Project Respect in Fig. |
| What materials | Schools allocated to receive the intervention will be provided with various resources. Schools will receive a manual to guide delivery of the intervention. School staff will be offered training (see below) and participants will receive slides to guide delivery of an all-staff training they deliver. Parents of students will be given written information on the intervention and advice on preventing and responding to DRV. Students will be given the opportunity to download the ‘Circle of 6’ app which helps individuals contact friends or the police if threatened by/experiencing DRV. Schools will be provided with written lesson plans and slides to guide delivery of a classroom social and emotional skills curriculum targeting students aged 13–15 years which includes a student-led campaign element. |
| What procedures | Project Respect is a multi-component school-based universal prevention intervention. The intervention aims to address DRV perpetrated by young people of all genders in heterosexual or same-sex relationships. School policies and rules will be rewritten to ensure that they aim to prevent and respond to DRV and gender-based harassment. Areas on the school site that are identified through student and staff mapping exercises as ‘hotspots’ for DRV and gender-based harassment will be patrolled by staff to prevent and respond to incidents. Responses will include appropriate sanctions for perpetration, support for victims and referral of victims or perpetrators to specialist services where necessary. |
| Who provides | School staff will implement the intervention with support from the NPSCC. Training will be provided by NSPCC for senior leadership and other key school staff to enable them to plan and deliver the intervention in their schools and review school rules and policies to help prevent and respond to DRV and gender-based harassment, and increase staff presence in ‘hotspots’ for these behaviours. Training will then be provided by these trained school staff for all other school staff in safeguarding to prevent, recognise and respond to gender-based harassment and DRV. The NSPCC will further support intervention delivery by offering advice sessions of up to one hour per week to intervention schools. |
| How | All intervention components will be delivered face-to-face and at the group level. |
| Where | All components will be delivered on school premises. |
| When and how much | Training by NSPCC will be provided in a 2–3-h session. Training within the school will be provided in a 60–90-min session. Policy review and hotspot mapping will occur in one or more school management meetings. School patrols will occur throughout the school year. The intervention curriculum will comprise six sessions in year 9 and two booster sessions for the same cohort in year 10, a relatively small number of lessons both years to ensure that the curriculum can be implemented in busy school timetables. |
| Tailoring | The intervention will not be tailored. |
| How well (planned fidelity assessment) | As described in the ‘ |
Fig. 2Theory of change for Project Respect