Work Description

Title: National Perspectives of Youth (SoMe) Dataset and Key Open Access Deposited

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Methodology
  • We recruited a prospective cohort of AYAs aged 15-24 years using targeted social media campaigns in 100 counties across the U.S. with the highest Chlamydia trachomatis incidence in AYAs. Those meeting eligibility criteria answered a 23-item questionnaire assessing general demographics, sexual behaviors, history of STI testing, and STI testing preferences. Following the study questionnaire, participants were eligible to complete an incentive questionnaire to receive a $15 digital gift card. Responses were verified through a rigorous two-step data integrity process, followed by data analysis employing descriptive statistics and bivariate logistic regressions to assess perspectives on privacy, specimen self-collection, and virtual care utilization as primary outcomes.
Description
  • Our final sample included 445 participants. Most identified as White (65.0%), non-Hispanic (82.8%), and heterosexual (60.0%). The study revealed disparities in comfort levels regarding receiving home-based STI-test kits at home and other household members seeing them; responses varied by education level, gender identity, and U.S. region. Individuals with less than a high school education were less likely to feel comfortable self-collecting for STI testing.
Creator
Depositor
Contact information
Discipline
Funding agency
  • Other Funding Agency
Other Funding agency
  • University of Michigan Medical School, Office of the Provost
Keyword
Citations to related material
  • Parker JN, Rager TL, Burns J, Mmeje O. Data Verification and Respondent Validity for an Internet-Based Sexual Health Survey: Tutorial. JMIR Form Res. 2024;8. doi:10.2196/56788
Resource type
Last modified
  • 12/24/2024
Published
  • 12/24/2024
Language
DOI
  • https://doi.org/10.7302/72jv-qt42
License
To Cite this Work:
Rager, T., Mmeje, O., Parker, J. (2024). National Perspectives of Youth (SoMe) Dataset and Key [Data set], University of Michigan - Deep Blue Data. https://doi.org/10.7302/72jv-qt42

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Date: 16 December 2024 Dataset Title: National Perspectives of Youth (SoMe) Dataset and Key Dataset Creators: Rager, T.L., Parker, J.N., Mmeje, O. Dataset Contact: Jayelin Parker, [email protected] Funding: University of Michigan Office of the Provost Key Points: Investigators must be prepared to receive and address fraudulent responses in and understand that there are tools available for detecting such responses. Investigators must identify and develop the best bot and other fraudulent response detection protocols for online data collection. As new detection software becomes available and new bots are programmed, it is critical to employ new technologies to support data integrity. Research Overview: Our final sample included 445 participants. Most identified as White (65.0%), non-Hispanic (82.8%), and heterosexual (60.0%). The study revealed disparities in comfort levels regarding receiving home-based STI-test kits at home and other household members seeing them; responses varied by education level, gender identity, and U.S. region. Individuals with less than a high school education were less likely to feel comfortable self-collecting for STI testing.� Methodology: �A 26-item survey was developed and programmed with several data integrity functions, including reCAPTCHA scores, RelevantID fraud and duplicate scores, verification of IP addresses, and honeypot questions. Participants aged 15-24 years were recruited via social media advertisements over 7 weeks and received a US $15 incentive after survey completion. Data verification occurred through a 2-part cleaning process, which removed responses that were incomplete, flagged as spam by Qualtrics, or from duplicate IP addresses, or those that did not meet the inclusion criteria. Final comparisons of reported age with date of birth and reported state with state inclusion criteria were performed. Participants who completed the study survey were linked to a second survey to receive their incentive. Responses without first and last names and full addresses were removed, as were those with duplicate IP addresses or the exact same longitude and latitude coordinates. Finally, IP addresses used to complete both surveys were compared, and consistent responses were eligible for an incentive. Date Coverage: June 2023-July 2023 Instrument and/or Software specifications: None Files contained here: - Codebook: NatPerspCodebook - Data: NatPerspData - Enrollment Consent Form: NatPerspConsent Related publication(s): Parker JN, Rager TL, Burns J, Mmeje O. Data Verification and Respondent Validity for a Web-Based Sexual Health Survey: Tutorial.�JMIR Form Res. 2024;8:e56788. Published 2024 Dec 9. doi:10.2196/56788 Use and Access: This data set is made available under a Creative Commons NonCommercial 4.0 International License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ To Cite Data: Rager, T., Mmeje, O., Parker, J.�National Perspectives of Youth (SoMe) Dataset and Key�[Data set], University of Michigan - Deep Blue Data.�https://doi.org/10.7302/72jv-qt42

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