More than 800,000 teenagers become pregnant each year. Youthdevelopment programs, which are based on the belief that assets can insulate youthfrom engaging in harmful behaviors, are one promising approach to preventing teen pregnancy. However, to date there is little hard scientific evidence to suggest that youth assets are causally related to a reduction in teen sexual and related risk behaviors. The Youth Asset Study (YAS), a 3-year project funded by the CDC, is currently underwayto test the asset/teen sexual behavior causal relationship. The current proposalis to requestfunding to extend the YAS so that waves 4 to 6data can be collected and analyzed. The YAS is the first study to specifically and comprehensively investigate, using a developmental age group approachand a longitudinal study design, the relationships amongyouth assets and community factors and the strength of their relationships to youth sexual behavior, teen pregnancy, and related risk behaviors (e.g., alcohol and drug use). Currrently, we are tracking a cohort of youth (baseline ages 12 to 17)and their parents (N=1,000 youth/parent pairs) in a 3-year longitudinal study. Using in-home, in-person interview methods, the study team collected wave 1 data from 1,000 youth/parent pairs and wave 2 data from more than 100youth/parent pairs (to date). The retention rate is 94%. Wave 3 data will be collected in 2005 and 2006. This proposal encompassescollecting and analyzing data from waves 4 to 6 from the same youth/parent pairs. Byfollowing these youth through their teenage years and into early adulthood, we will investigate the role of assetsand community factors in influencing the health behavior and outcomes of youth as they transition into older teenand young adulthood. The YAS goals directly contribute to several Healthy People 2010 objectivesincluding objectives9-7 (i.e., Reduce pregnancies among adolescent females) and 25-11 (i.e., Increase the proportion of adolescents whoabstain from sexual intercourse or who use condoms if currently sexually active). The YAS is a scientifically rigorous evaluation of hypothesized relationships among community factors, assets and youth risk behaviors, which is of critical interest to the CDC, state and local health departments,and other organizations working in adolescent health.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Chronic Disease Prev and Health Promo (NCCDPHP)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
5U01DP000132-05
Application #
7631299
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDP1-AJS (02))
Program Officer
Patterson, Beth
Project Start
2005-06-01
Project End
2011-05-31
Budget Start
2009-06-01
Budget End
2011-05-31
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$339,842
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
Department
Miscellaneous
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
878648294
City
Oklahoma City
State
OK
Country
United States
Zip Code
73117
Cheney, Marshall K; Oman, Roy F; Vesely, Sara K et al. (2015) Prospective association between negative life events and initiation of sexual intercourse: the influence of family structure and family income. Am J Public Health 105:598-604
Cheney, Marshall K; Oman, Roy F; Vesely, Sara K (2015) Prospective associations among youth assets in young adults and tobacco use. Am J Prev Med 48:S94-S101
Oman, Roy F; Vesely, Sara K; Aspy, Cheryl B et al. (2015) Prospective Associations Among Assets and Successful Transition to Early Adulthood. Am J Public Health 105:e51-e56
Cheney, Marshall K; Oman, Roy F; Vesely, Sara K et al. (2014) Prospective associations between negative life events and youth tobacco use. Am J Health Behav 38:942-50
Aspy, Cheryl B; Tolma, Eleni L; Oman, Roy F et al. (2014) The influence of assets and environmental factors on gender differences in adolescent drug use. J Adolesc 37:827-37
Oman, Roy F; Vesely, Sara K; Aspy, Cheryl B et al. (2013) A longitudinal study of youth assets, neighborhood conditions, and youth sexual behaviors. J Adolesc Health 52:779-85
Aspy, Cheryl B; Vesely, Sara K; Oman, Roy F et al. (2012) School-related assets and youth risk behaviors: alcohol consumption and sexual activity. J Sch Health 82:3-10
Tolma, Eleni L; Oman, Roy F; Vesely, Sara K et al. (2011) Parental youth assets and sexual activity: differences by race/ethnicity. Am J Health Behav 35:513-24
Bensyl, Diana M; Vesely, Sara K; Tolma, Eleni L et al. (2011) Associations between youth assets and sexual intercourse by household income. Am J Health Promot 25:301-9
Mueller, Trisha; Gavin, Lorrie; Oman, Roy et al. (2010) Youth assets and sexual risk behavior: differences between male and female adolescents. Health Educ Behav 37:343-56

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