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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Effectiveness of a mobile app intervention to prevent dating violence in residential child care
ÁNgela CarbonellJosé J. Navarro-pérezAmparo OliverBarry H. Schneidersubject
Social Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectResidential child carelcsh:BF1-990Dating violenceSexismdating violence050109 social psychologyInterventionAmbivalenceTreatment and control groupsMultivariate analysis of varianceDevelopmental and Educational Psychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesChild and Youth CareinterventionApplied Psychologymedia_common05 social sciencesMythologyresidential child careRomanceAdolescencelcsh:PsychologyAmbivalent sexismadolescencesexismPrejudicePsychology050104 developmental & child psychologyClinical psychologydescription
ABSTRACT This study focuses on the effectiveness of an app-based, monitored intervention using the Liad@s app in a residential youth-care setting. The aim of this intervention is to reduce maladaptive beliefs and attitudes linked to dating violence: distortions or myths about romantic love and hostile and benevolent dimensions of sexism. A quasi-experimental pre-post study with a control group was carried out. Participants were 71 adolescents from 9 group homes in Valencia (Spain). The outcomes measures were hostile and benevolent sexism (Ambivalent Sexism Inventory - ASI), ambivalence and prejudice towards men (Ambivalence toward Men Inventory - AMI), and myths about romantic love. The results of the intervention were assessed using multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA). A post-intervention, statistically significant reduction with a medium-large effect size was observed in all dimensions for the treatment group, with eta-square of .25 for the sexism dimensions, .38 for myths, and .21 for ambivalence and prejudices. The experimental group demonstrated significantly more change than the control group on all measures. The benefits of the intervention did not vary by participants' sex. These results may be helpful to professionals involved in child and youth care, who can profit from adolescents' proclivity toward online communication.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-04-01 |