@article{10.22454/PRiMER.2018.643753, author = {Brown, Kathryn S. and Meixner, Kaitlin A. and DeBenedictus, Christina M. and Riley, Margaret A.}, title = {Effect of a Medical Student-Led Curriculum on Teen Health Knowledge and Intentions: An Evaluation of the MiHealth Pilot Program}, journal = {PRiMER}, volume = {2}, year = {2018}, month = {12}, doi = {10.22454/PRiMER.2018.643753}, abstract = {Introduction: Adolescents are often thought of as a healthy population, however, they routinely engage in high-risk behaviors that can lead to health problems. Medical students designed MiHealth, a program in which medical students teach health lessons in the high school classroom to help address these behaviors. Methods: A series of six lessons were created and implemented in the classroom for this pilot study focused on sexual health, intimate partner violence, mental health, smoking and marijuana, nutrition, and physical fitness. High school students in grades nine through twelve at a public high school in southeast Michigan receiving the MiHealth curriculum (N=52) or the standard health education curriculum (N=61) were surveyed on health knowledge, attitudes, and intentions before and after the program. Results: Six weeks after program completion, high school students who received the MiHealth curriculum scored significantly higher on health knowledge (P=0.007), and expressed significantly healthier attitudes and intentions toward risk behavior compared to controls (P=0.025). Among individual themes, MiHealth resulted in significant knowledge gains in sexual health (P=0.001) and mental health (P<0.025), and significantly healthier attitudes regarding sexual health (P=0.047), nutrition (P=0.040), and smoking andĀ marijuana (P=0.012). Conclusions: MiHealth demonstrated promising improvements in health knowledge retention and attitude changes in adolescents 6 weeks after program completion. An interactive curriculum targeting key adolescent health topics given by near-peer medical student educators may provide benefits beyond traditional high school health curricula.}, URL = {https://journals.stfm.org//primer/2018/brown-2018-0032/}, eprint = {https://journals.stfm.org//media/1978/brown-primer2018643753.pdf}, }