PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Hasbro Children's Hospital study finds texting program good option for teen girls' health

Study highlights resource for physicians to provide counseling and preventative services to under-served teens

2014-03-12
(Press-News.org) PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Megan Ranney, M.D., M.P.H., an emergency medicine attending physician at Hasbro Children's Hospital, recently led a study that found a text-message program may be an effective violence prevention tool for at-risk teen girls. The study has been published online in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

"Mobile health, or 'mHealth,' is increasingly being used as a way to improve people's health, via text-messaging or phone-based applications," said Ranney. "However, few people have studied whether teens are interested in mHealth, especially for prevention-type messages, even though the vast majority of teens who come to the emergency department (ED) use mobile phones and more than 95 percent of those patients report that they use text messaging."

Ranney's team interviewed girls between the ages of 13 and 17 who reported past-year peer violence and depressive symptoms during emergency department visits for any medical issue. Overwhelmingly, the interviews showed that at-risk teen girls coming to the ED for care are very interested in receiving a text-message violence prevention intervention. The teens felt that a text-message program would enhance their existing coping strategies, and that they would not only use it themselves, but also refer their friends to it.

"The ED is the primary source of care for many teens with high risk behaviors, such as peer violence, and it provides an important opportunity to initiate preventive interventions. However, there can be many limitations to providing such interventions in real time, including lack of time and resources on the part of ED staff, poor accessibility and availability of community resources, and low rates of follow-through with treatment referrals, leaving this group of teens largely under-served," said Ranney. "For these high-risk populations, who have high rates of mobile phone ownership but low accessibility to traditional health care, mHealth may be a particularly promising format for delivering preventive care."

The research team also discovered some important guidelines about how a text-message preventive intervention should be structured. The intervention should be personalized, positively worded, and conversational, but also it should be clear that the messages are coming from an expert. The teens also expressed a need for the ability to request additional text messages as needed, in addition to receiving pre-scheduled text content.

"We know that a history of fights or violence increases girls' long-term risk of alcohol and drug use, dating violence and depression," said Ranney. "Sadly, high-risk teen girls have few options to help them prevent fights, and traditional ways of helping teens, such as parents, grandparents, and physicians, may not be available or accessible."

Ranney continued, "But almost every teen girl has a cell phone and uses text messaging. If we can develop a text-message program that works for these teens, we may be able to help them make it through their teen years with fewer problems. This study is an important first step in developing such a program."

In the future, Ranney hopes to also study teen boys and non-English speaking patients as possible participants in the delivery of counseling and behavioral skills text messaging. "By developing evidence-based text-message interventions, clinicians may be able to have a big influence on these teens' coping skills, involvement in fights and life choices," said Ranney.

INFORMATION: The study, titled "Acceptability, language, and structure of text-message-based behavioral interventions for high-risk adolescent females," was funded by a grant from the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine, as well as the National Institutes of Health under grant number K23MH095866.

The principal affiliation of Ranney is Hasbro Children's Hospital, the pediatric division of Rhode Island Hospital and a part of the Lifespan health system in Rhode Island. She is affiliated with the Injury Prevention Center at Rhode Island Hospital. Ranney is also assistant professor of emergency medicine at The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University.

About Hasbro Children's Hospital Hasbro Children's Hospital in Providence, R.I., a part of the Lifespan health care system, is the premier pediatric facility for clinical care, research and education for Rhode Island and surrounding southeastern New England. A private, not-for-profit institution, it is the pediatric division of Rhode Island Hospital. Rhode Island Hospital is the principal teaching hospital of The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, through which the department of pediatrics brings in $23 million in external research funding annually. Hasbro Children's Hospital's "All for One" commitment devotes all of its knowledge, experience, and passion for healing to each child in its care. For more information visit http://www.hasbrochildrenshospital.org, follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/HasbroChildrens, like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/hasbrochildrenshospitalpage or Pin with us http://www.pinterest.com/hasbrochildrens/.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Wishing to be another gender: Links to ADHD and autism spectrum disorders

2014-03-12
Children and teenagers with an autism spectrum disorder or those who have attention deficit and hyperactivity problems are much more likely to wish to be another gender. So says John Strang of the Children's National Medical Center in Washington, DC, USA, leader of the first study to compare the occurrence of such gender identity issues among children and adolescents with and without specific neurodevelopmental disorders. The paper is published in Springer's journal Archives of Sexual Behavior. Children between 6 and 18 years old were part of the study. They either had ...

Lawns across America: Is the US becoming 1 shade of green?

Lawns across America: Is the US becoming 1 shade of green?
2014-03-12
Boston and Baltimore. Miami and Minneapolis. Phoenix and Los Angeles. Fanned across the United States and in locations from coast to prairie to desert, what do these cities have in common? How their human residents manage that icon of America, the urban lawn, or so hypothesized a team of scientists. However, when they conducted a study comparing residential landscapes in these six cities, they discovered that lawn care practices had fewer similarities than they expected. Ecologists Colin Polsky of Clark University in Worcester, Mass., Peter Groffman of the Cary Institute ...

Climate of Genghis Khan's ancient time extends long shadow over Asia of today

Climate of Genghis Khans ancient time extends long shadow over Asia of today
2014-03-12
Climate was very much on Genghis Khan's side as he expanded his Mongol Empire across northeastern Asia. That link between Mongolia's climate and its human history echoes down the centuries, according to findings reported in this week's issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). But climate may no longer be the boon it was during the latter, wetter part of Genghis Khan's reign. The early years were marked by drought. Mongolia's current drought conditions could have serious consequences for the Asia region's human and other inhabitants. The ...

NASA sees remnants of Tropical Cyclone Hadi in So. Pacific

NASA sees remnants of Tropical Cyclone Hadi in So. Pacific
2014-03-12
Tropical Cyclone Hadi is now a remnant low pressure area in the Southern Pacific Ocean. NASA's Aqua satellite passed over the storm and captured a visible image of it on March 12. When NASA's Aqua satellite flew over Hadi's remnants, the MODIS instrument aboard captured a visible image that showed the strongest thunderstorms associated with the low appeared south of the center of circulation. The center was located near 15.1 south and 156.1 east, about 585 nautical miles/673.2 miles/ 1,083 km west of Vanuatu. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center or JTWC noted that animated ...

Skating to the puck or avoiding the penalty box in health care?

2014-03-12
LEBANON, NH (March 12, 2014) – In a Viewpoint published in the March issue of JAMA, Researcher Jeremiah Brown of The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice and colleagues, Hal Sox and David Goodman, question whether the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' use of financial penalties is the right tack for changing the behavior of hospitals. The researchers examine the pros and cons of the hospital readmissions reduction policy in the Affordable Care Act as an example of similar CMS initiatives. "Using financial incentives to change practice ...

The immune system's redesigned role in fighting cancerous tumors

2014-03-12
LOS ANGELES (March 11, 2014) – Researchers in the Cedars-Sinai Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute eradicated solid tumors in laboratory mice using a novel combination of two targeted agents. These two synergistic therapies stimulate an immune response, ultimately allowing solid tumors to act as their own cancer-fighting vaccine. The study's findings, published in the journal Cancer Research, are the first to use these combined agents as an immune stimulator and may have the potential to kill cancerous cells in solid tumors, including some of the most aggressive ...

Fruit flies help uncover tumor-preventing protein complex

Fruit flies help uncover tumor-preventing protein complex
2014-03-12
A team of researchers from Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School have discovered a protein complex that disrupts the process known as dedifferentiation (1), known to promote tumor development. Dedifferentiation (reversion) is a process that leads progenitor (2) or mature cells to become 'ectopic neural stem cells' which causes tumors. By detecting this protein complex, Duke-NUS researchers have shed light on a process that inhibits tumor development and gives hope for the discovery of therapies and treatments that target tumor prevention through this pathway. Researchers ...

Researchers slow pancreatic cancer growth by blocking key enzyme

2014-03-12
A research team from Imperial College London has shown that blocking the function of an enzyme known as Hhat slows the growth and spread of pancreatic cancer, by preventing a protein called Hedgehog from stimulating nearby normal cells to help the cancer. The study, funded by the UK research charity Pancreatic Cancer Research Fund, examined the role of Hedgehog, whose usual job is to send signals to cells in embryos to divide and grow into the correct body parts. But while Hedgehog usually switches off when the embryo is formed, in many cancers, including pancreatic, ...

Superior visual thinking may be key to independence for high schoolers with autism

Superior visual thinking may be key to independence for high schoolers with autism
2014-03-12
Researchers at UNC's Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute (FPG) and UNC's School of Education report that teaching independence to adolescents with autism can provide a crucial boost to their chances for success after high school. "We explored many factors that contribute to the poor outcomes people with autism often experience," said Kara Hume, co-principal investigator of FPG's Center on Secondary Education for Students with Autism Spectrum Disorders (CSESA). "It's clear that teaching independence to students with autism should be a central focus of their ...

Chronic pain research explores the brain

2014-03-12
New insights into how the human brain responds to chronic pain could eventually lead to improved treatments for patients, according to University of Adelaide researchers. Neuroplasticity is the term used to describe the brain's ability to change structurally and functionally with experience and use. "Neuroplasticity underlies our learning and memory, making it vital during early childhood development and important for continuous learning throughout life," says Dr Ann-Maree Vallence, a Postdoctoral Fellow in the University of Adelaide's Robinson Institute. "The mechanisms ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study: ChatGPT displays lower concern for child development “warning signs” than physicians

Study: Childcare is unaffordable for U.S. medical residents

Study: New approach to equitable social care connects pediatric caregivers to resources without screening

Study: Rural children struggle to access hospital services

Study: Longer use of breathing device supports lung growth in preterm infants

Study: Newborn umbilical cord procedure safe for long-term neurodevelopment in children

Study: Eye ultrasounds may assist with detecting brain shunt failure in children

Study: Children with hypertension at higher long-term risk for serious heart conditions

Study: Rotavirus vaccinations in NICU pose minimal risk

Study: Long COVID symptoms in children vary by age

Study: Multicomponent intravenous lipid emulsion improves brain development in preterm infants

PAS 2024: Nemours Children’s Health researchers to present on youth mental health, vaccination, autism and respiratory illness

Lake tsunamis pose significant threat under warming climate

New Nevada experiments will improve monitoring of nuclear explosions

New study challenges one-size-fits-all approach to vitamin D supplementation guidelines

MBL Director Nipam Patel elected to National Academy of Sciences

The future of digital agriculture

Lahar detection system upgraded for mount rainier

NCSA's Bill Gropp elected to AAAS Council

George Mason University receives over $1.1 million to revolutionize Lyme disease testing

NASA selects BAE systems to develop air quality instrument for NOAA

For microscopic organisms, ocean currents act as 'expressway' to deeper depths, study finds

Rice’s Harvey, Ramesh named to National Academy of Sciences

Oil palm plantations are driving massive downstream impact to watershed

Nanotubes, nanoparticles, and antibodies detect tiny amounts of fentanyl

New eco-friendly lubricant additives protect turbine equipment, waterways

Monoclonal Antibodies in Immunodiagnosis and Immunotherapy appoints new Deputy Editor-in-Chief, Andrei Moroz, PhD

Optical pumped magnetometer magnetocardiography as a potential method of therapy monitoring in fulminant myocarditis

Heart failure registries in Asia – what have we learned?

Study helps understand how energy metabolism is regulated at cellular level

[Press-News.org] Hasbro Children's Hospital study finds texting program good option for teen girls' health
Study highlights resource for physicians to provide counseling and preventative services to under-served teens