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Using Middle School Science Teachers to Address Cancer Health Disparities
Sponsor: Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Summary
The CARES4You study is testing a middle school science curriculum designed to teach students about cancer risk and prevention. The lessons are taught by regular science teachers during class time and are aligned with national science education standards. The curriculum includes six units (14 lessons) that help students learn about cancer, understand how lifestyle and environmental factors influence risk, and think about ways to make healthy choices. The study will take place in 10 public middle schools in New York City. Some schools will begin using the CARES4You curriculum right away, while others will continue with their usual science lessons and receive the program later. Researchers will compare the two groups of schools. The main goal of the study is to see whether the curriculum increases students' intentions to engage in healthy behaviors that may reduce cancer risk. The study will also examine whether students talk more with their caregivers about cancer risk and prevention after participating in the program. Caregivers may also report on some health behaviors in the household. If the program is effective, CARES4You could provide schools with a practical and sustainable way to teach cancer prevention and promote healthy behaviors among adolescents and their families.
Official title: Using Middle School Science Teachers to Address Health Disparities
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
10 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
1812
Start Date
2026-01-29
Completion Date
2028-06-30
Last Updated
2026-03-30
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
CARES4You Curriculum
CARES4You is a teacher-delivered middle school science curriculum focused on cancer risk and prevention. Public middle schools in New York City self-select into either an immediate-intervention group or a delayed-intervention group. In both groups, grade-level science teachers deliver the same curriculum during regular 50-minute science classes over approximately five weeks. The program includes six units delivered across 14 lessons, typically taught 4-5 days per week. Units cover Cancer Genetics, Cancer Epidemiology, Media Literacy and Tobacco Advertising, Nutrition and Cancer, Biotechnology and Cancer, and Cancer Risk Reduction. Lessons combine brief instruction with interactive activities such as identifying cancer risk factors and discussing ways families can reduce risk. Students also complete a final cumulative project.
Locations (5)
Dock Street School for STEAM Studies District: 13 School #: K313
Brooklyn, New York, United States
P.S/I.S. 173 District: 6 School #: 173
New York, New York, United States
I.S. 145 Joseph Pulitzer District 30 School #: Q145
Queens, New York, United States
Metropolitan Expeditionary Learning School District 28 School #: Q167
Queens, New York, United States
Jonas Bronck Academy District: 7 School #: X043
The Bronx, New York, United States