My goal is to radically shift our approach to prevention. I want to leverage online advertising, social media and smartphone technology to create a rapid, effective and scalable platform for targeted prevention messages that actually shift health behaviors. I plan to start with skin cancer prevention, using tanning beds and melanoma as the proof-of-principle example. However, this work will be broadly generalizable to many other public health challenges where behaviors play a key role in the disease process. Over half of cancers are preventable through behavioral changes, vaccines, or medications.1,2 However the process of moving from scientific evidence to implementation is painfully slow. Recent Institute of Medicine and RAND reports estimate that only 50% of recommended health care practices are implemented, and this takes decades. The situation is even worse for preventive health care. Meanwhile, both melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC) rates continue to increase.3 4 In fact, incidence of skin cancer is higher than all other cancers combined. Indoor tanning is a class I carcinogen and a major, modifiable risk factor that accounts for over 450,000 new NMSC and over 10,000 melanomas each year.5 This is close to half a million potentially preventable skin cancers each year. Yet, tanning bed use remains common with 1 in 5 adolescents and over 40% of college students using tanning beds in the last year.5 Despite significant investment in prevention efforts, including well-designed campaigns by foundations focused on skin cancer prevention, our efforts to impact incidence of skin cancer have hit a brick wall. Technology to target health messages can get the right message to the right person at the right time. Social media and online search engines give us an unprecedented ability to target our health messages directly to those at highest risk. These platforms give us a way to direct a message precisely when teens are ? for example ? searching for a tanning salon.7,8 Over 90% of teens and young adults are online daily, and 92% engage with two or more devices simultaneously-including smartphones, tablets, PC and TV.9, 10 The most efficient way to reach the largest number of young adults is through the technology they are using, including: social media, online search engines and smartphones. Online advertising works to shift attitudes towards consumer brands, and shift purchasing behaviors. Therefore, this approach could be used to shift indoor tanning attitudes and behaviors. The advantages of leveraging advertising on social networking and search sites include: 1) unprecedented reach, 2) relatively low cost, and 3) the opportunity to target specific audiences. First, we will use a mixed-methods approach to learn which messages are most engaging. Then we will test which messages are most effective at shifting knowledge and self-reported tanning behaviors using two online randomized trial designs. Finally, we will run a large national trial to test whether these messages shift actual tanning bed use and melanoma incidence.

Public Health Relevance

My goal is to radically shift our approach to prevention. I want to leverage online advertising, social media and smartphone technology to create a rapid, effective and scalable platform for targeted prevention messages that actually shift health behaviors. Using tanning beds and melanoma prevention as a proof of principle example, we propose a large mixed methods approach and a randomized controlled trial to test whether these online messages can shift tanning knowledge and behaviors.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
NIH Director’s New Innovator Awards (DP2)
Project #
7DP2CA225433-02
Application #
9852171
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Blake, Kelly D
Project Start
2017-09-11
Project End
2022-06-30
Budget Start
2019-02-01
Budget End
2022-06-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Stanford University
Department
Dermatology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
009214214
City
Stanford
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94304
Wehner, M R; Dalma, N; Landefeld, C et al. (2018) Natural history of lesions suspicious for basal cell carcinoma in older adults in Ikaria, Greece. Br J Dermatol 179:767-768
Park, Joyce H; Christman, Mitalee P; Linos, Eleni et al. (2018) Dermatology on Instagram: An Analysis of Hashtags. J Drugs Dermatol 17:482-484
Riano, Nicholas S; Linos, Eleni; Accurso, Erin C et al. (2018) Paid Family and Childbearing Leave Policies at Top US Medical Schools. JAMA 319:611-614
Gao, Yi; Arron, Sarah T; Linos, Eleni et al. (2018) Indoor Tanning, Sunless Tanning, and Sun-Protection Behaviors Among Sexual Minority Men. JAMA Dermatol 154:477-479
Linos, Eleni; Pagoto, Sherry (2018) USPSTF Recommendations for Behavioral Counseling for Skin Cancer Prevention: Throwing Shade on UV Radiation. JAMA Intern Med 178:609-611
Nosrati, Adi; Pimentel, Matthew A; Falzone, Ashley et al. (2018) Skin cancer prevention messages on Facebook: Likes, shares, and comments. J Am Acad Dermatol 79:582-585.e1
Sarkar, Urmimala; Le, Gem M; Lyles, Courtney R et al. (2018) Using Social Media to Target Cancer Prevention in Young Adults: Viewpoint. J Med Internet Res 20:e203
Wehner, Mackenzie R; Cidre Serrano, Wilmarie; Nosrati, Adi et al. (2018) All-cause mortality in patients with basal and squamous cell carcinoma: A systematic review and meta-analysis. J Am Acad Dermatol 78:663-672.e3
Linos, Eleni; Admassu, Natnaelle; Sabry-Elnaggar, Hala et al. (2017) Doctor fails: early warning signs of physician fatigue? BMJ 359:j5503
Wehner, Mackenzie R; Nead, Kevin T; Linos, Eleni (2017) Correlation Among Cancer Incidence and Mortality Rates and Internet Searches in the United States. JAMA Dermatol 153:911-914

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