Engineering an Online STI Prevention Program: CSE2

Sponsor
Penn State University (Other)
Overall Status
Completed
CT.gov ID
NCT03408743
Collaborator
University of North Carolina, Greensboro (Other)
2,946
4
32
3.4
736.5
215.6

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

The overall objective of the proposed research is to reduce the incidence of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among college students. The investigators propose to accomplish this by using the innovative, engineering-inspired multiphase optimization strategy (MOST) to develop a highly effective, appealing, economical, and readily scalable internet-delivered behavioral intervention targeting the intersection of alcohol use and sexual risk behavior. The rate of STIs on college campuses is alarming: one in four college students is diagnosed with an STI at least once during their college experience. Sexual activity when drinking alcohol is highly prevalent among college students. Alcohol use is known to contribute to the sexual risk behaviors that are most responsible for the transmission of STIs, namely unprotected sex, contact with numerous partners, and "hook-ups" (casual sexual encounters). Few interventions have been developed that explicitly target the intersection of alcohol use and sexual risk behaviors, and none have been optimized. In order to reduce the incidence of STI transmission among this and other high-risk groups, a new approach is needed. MOST is a comprehensive methodological framework that brings the power of engineering principles to bear on optimization of behavioral interventions. MOST enables researchers to experimentally test the individual components in an intervention to determine their effectiveness, indicating which components need to be revised and re-tested. Given the high rates of alcohol use and sex among college students, the college setting provides an ideal opportunity for intervening on alcohol use and sexual risk behaviors. The proposed study will include a diverse population of college students on 4 campuses which will increase the generalizability of the findings. The specific aims are to (1) develop and pilot test an initial set of online intervention components targeting the link between alcohol use and sexual risk behaviors, (2) use the MOST approach to build an optimized preventive intervention, and (3) evaluate the effectiveness of the newly optimized preventive intervention using a fully powered randomized controlled trial (RCT). This work will result in a new, more potent behavioral intervention that will reduce the incidence of STIs among college students in the US, and will lay the groundwork for a new generation of highly effective STI prevention interventions aimed at other subpopulations at risk.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Behavioral: Knowledge Alone
  • Behavioral: Self-efficacy alone
  • Behavioral: Perceived benefits alone
  • Behavioral: Benefits and self-efficacy
  • Behavioral: Injunctive norms alone
  • Behavioral: Injunctive norms and self-efficacy
  • Behavioral: Injunctive norms and benefits
  • Behavioral: Injunctive norms, benefits, self-efficacy
  • Behavioral: Descriptive norms alone
  • Behavioral: Descriptive norms and self-efficacy
  • Behavioral: Descriptive norms and perceived benefits
  • Behavioral: Descriptive norms, benefits, self-efficacy
  • Behavioral: Descriptive norms and injunctive norms
  • Behavioral: Descriptive and injunctive norms, self-efficacy
  • Behavioral: Descriptive and injunctive norms, and benefits
  • Behavioral: Descriptive & injunctive norms, benefits, efficacy
  • Behavioral: Expectancies alone
  • Behavioral: Expectancies and self-efficacy
  • Behavioral: Expectancies and perceived benefits
  • Behavioral: Expectancies, benefits, self-efficacy
  • Behavioral: Expectancies and injunctive norms
  • Behavioral: Expectancies, injunctive norms, self-efficacy
  • Behavioral: Expectancies, injunctive norms, and benefits
  • Behavioral: Expectancies, injunctive norms, benefits, efficacy
  • Behavioral: Expectancies and descriptive norms
  • Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive norms, & self-efficacy
  • Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive norms, benefits
  • Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive norms, benefits, efficacy
  • Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive and injunctive norms
  • Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive & injunctive norms, efficacy
  • Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive & injunctive norms, benefits
  • Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive & injunctive, benefits, efficacy
N/A

Detailed Description

As part of the MOST approach, the investigators will conduct a series of screening experiments to build an optimized intervention. The current study is the second (of two) screening experiments. The first screening experiment corresponds to clinicaltrials.gov ID # NCT02897804.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Actual Enrollment :
2946 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Factorial Assignment
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose:
Prevention
Official Title:
The Intersection of Alcohol and Sex: Engineering an Online STI Prevention Program
Actual Study Start Date :
Sep 18, 2017
Actual Primary Completion Date :
Dec 31, 2017
Actual Study Completion Date :
Dec 31, 2017

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Knowledge alone

Participants will have access to the knowledge module for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Knowledge Alone
Increase knowledge relate d STIs, STI risk, alcohol impairment, condom use skills, alcohol use behavior tracking skills, testing & treatment services.

Experimental: Self-efficacy alone

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the self-efficacy module for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Self-efficacy alone
Increase self-efficacy to us e protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Perceived benefits alone

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the perceived benefits module for a period up to 3 weeks. *Also referred to as 'benefits' in other arm descriptions**

Behavioral: Perceived benefits alone
Increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol.

Experimental: Benefits and self-efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus perceived benefits and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Benefits and self-efficacy
Increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Injunctive norms alone

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the injunctive norms module for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Injunctive norms alone
Correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking.

Experimental: Injunctive norms and self-efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus injunctive norms and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Injunctive norms and self-efficacy
Correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Injunctive norms and benefits

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus injunctive norms and perceived benefits modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Injunctive norms and benefits
Correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking and increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Injunctive norms, benefits, self-efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the injunctive norms, perceived benefits, and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Injunctive norms, benefits, self-efficacy
Correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking; increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex; and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Descriptive norms alone

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the descriptive norms modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Descriptive norms alone
Correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors.

Experimental: Descriptive norms and self-efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the descriptive norms and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Descriptive norms and self-efficacy
Correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Descriptive norms and perceived benefits

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the descriptive norms and perceived benefits modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Descriptive norms and perceived benefits
Correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors and increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol.

Experimental: Descriptive norms, benefits, self-efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the descriptive norms, perceived benefits, and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Descriptive norms, benefits, self-efficacy
Correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors; increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol; and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Descriptive norms and injunctive norms

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the descriptive norms and injunctive norms modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Descriptive norms and injunctive norms
Correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors and correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking.

Experimental: Descriptive and injunctive norms, self-efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the injunctive norms and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Descriptive and injunctive norms, self-efficacy
orrect misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors; correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking; and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Descriptive and injunctive norms, and benefits

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the descriptive norms, injunctive norms, and perceived benefits modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Descriptive and injunctive norms, and benefits
Correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors; correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking; and increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol.

Experimental: Descriptive & injunctive norms, benefits, efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the descriptive norms, injunctive norms, perceived benefits, and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Descriptive & injunctive norms, benefits, efficacy
Correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors; correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking; increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol; and Increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Expectancies alone

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies module for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies alone
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter.

Experimental: Expectancies and self-efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies and self-efficacy
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Expectancies and perceived benefits

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies and perceived benefits modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies and perceived benefits
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter and increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol.

Experimental: Expectancies, benefits, self-efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies, perceived benefits, and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies, benefits, self-efficacy
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter; increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol; and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Expectancies and injunctive norms

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies and injunctive norms modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies and injunctive norms
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter and correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking.

Experimental: Expectancies, injunctive norms, self-efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies, injunctive norms, and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies, injunctive norms, self-efficacy
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter; correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking; and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Expectancies, injunctive norms, and benefits

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies, injunctive norms, and perceived benefits modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies, injunctive norms, and benefits
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter; correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking; and increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol.

Experimental: Expectancies, injunctive norms, benefits, efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies, injunctive norms, perceived benefits, and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies, injunctive norms, benefits, efficacy
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter; correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking; increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol; and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Expectancies and descriptive norms

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies and descriptive norms modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies and descriptive norms
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter and correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors.

Experimental: Expectancies, descriptive norms, self-efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies, descriptive norms, and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive norms, & self-efficacy
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter; correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors; and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Expectancies, descriptive norms, benefits

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies, descriptive norms, and perceived benefits modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive norms, benefits
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter; correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors; and increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol.

Experimental: Expectancies, descriptive norms, benefits, efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies, descriptive norms, perceived benefits, and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive norms, benefits, efficacy
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter; correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors; increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol; and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Expectancies, descriptive and injunctive norms

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies , descriptive norms, and injunctive norms modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive and injunctive norms
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter; correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors; and correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking.

Experimental: Expectancies, descriptive & injunctive norms, efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies , descriptive norms, injunctive norms, and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive & injunctive norms, efficacy
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter; correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors; correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking; and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Experimental: Expectancies, descriptive & injunctive norms, benefits

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies, descriptive norms, injunctive norms, and perceived benefits modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive & injunctive norms, benefits
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter; correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors; correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking; and increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol.

Experimental: Expectancies, descriptive & injunctive, benefits, efficacy

Participants will have access to the knowledge module plus the expectancies, descriptive norms, injunctive norms, perceived benefits, and self-efficacy modules for a period up to 3 weeks.

Behavioral: Expectancies, descriptive & injunctive, benefits, efficacy
Decrease the expectation that alcohol is needed to have good sexual encounter; correct misperceptions of prevalence of alcohol-induced sexual risk behaviors, alcohol use/misuse, and sexual risk behaviors; correct misperceptions regarding approval of alcohol misuse & sexual risk taking; increase perceived benefits to use protective behavioral strategies to reduce the negative consequences of engaging in sexual behaviors under the influence of alcohol; and increase self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies (e.g., condom negotiation skills) to reduce unprotected sex.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Descriptive norms about the intersection of alcohol and sex collected via an online questionnaire. [This measure will be assessed immediately following the 3-week intervention.]

    This scale consists of 6 items and will be created as a weighted scale score. Analyses will report the mean and standard deviation and expected mean values from a regression analysis. The scale will reflect the average perceived prevalence of the alcohol and sex behaviors.

  2. Injunctive norms about the intersection of alcohol and sex collected via an online questionnaire. [his measure will be assessed immediately following the 3-week intervention.]

    This scale consists of 6 items and will be created as a weighted scale score. Analyses will report the mean and standard deviation and expected mean values from a regression analysis. The scale will reflect the average perceived approval of the alcohol and sex behaviors, ranging from strongly disapprove to strongly approve.

  3. Expectancies about the intersection of alcohol use and sex collected via an online questionnaire. [This measure will be assessed immediately following the 3-week intervention.]

    This scale consists of 10 items and will be created as a weighted scale score. Analyses will report the mean and standard deviation and expected mean values from a regression analysis. The scale will reflect the average number of drinks expected to experience the 10 different outcomes.

  4. Perceived benefits about using protective behavioral strategies collected via an online questionnaire. [This measure will be assessed immediately following the 3-week intervention.]

    This scale consists of 11 items and will be created as a weighted scale score. Analyses will report the mean and standard deviation and expected mean values from a regression analysis. The scale will reflect the average likelihood of contracting an STI using the listed behaviors.

  5. Self-efficacy to use protective behavioral strategies collected via an online questionnaire. [This measure will be assessed immediately following the 3-week intervention.]

    This scale consists of 9 items and will be created as a weighted scale score. Analyses will report the mean and standard deviation and expected mean values from a regression analysis. The scale will reflect the average level of confidence is using protective behavioral strategies to reduce the risk of contracting and STI, ranging from not at all confident to extremely confident.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Binge drinking behavior collected via an online questionnaire. [This measure will be assessed 1 month following the completion of the intervention.]

    This item asks how many times in the past two weeks a male has 5 or more drinks in a 2-hour period (or females 4 or more drinks in a 2-hour period). This variable will be collapsed into 1 or more times versus other and reported as a prevalence of this behavior and used as a dichotomous outcome in regression analyses.

  2. Unprotected sex behavior at most recent sex collected via an online questionnaire. [This measure will be assessed 1 month following the completion of the intervention.]

    This item asks whether or not a condom was used for oral, anal or vaginal sex. This variable will be collapsed into a dichotomous variable with unprotected anal or vaginal sex versus other and reported as a prevalence of this behavior and used as a dichotomous outcome in regression analyses.

  3. Penetrative sex at most recent hookup collected via an online questionnaire. [This measure will be assessed 1 month following the completion of the intervention.]

    This item asks whether or not the most recent hookup included vaginal or anal sex. This variable will be collapsed into a dichotomous variable with penetrative sex versus other and reported as a prevalence of this behavior and used as a dichotomous outcome in regression analyses.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years to 30 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
Yes
Inclusion Criteria:
  • Currently enrolled at an American college or university

  • A first-year student or first-year transfer student

  • 18 years of age or older

  • Have not gone through previous versions of itMatters before

Exclusion Criteria:
  • Not a first-year student or transfer student

  • Younger than 18 years of age

  • Have gone through previous versions of itMatters

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Fresno State University Fresno California United States 93740
2 North Dakota State University Fargo North Dakota United States 58108
3 Middle Tennessee State University Murfreesboro Tennessee United States 37132
4 Texas A&M University College Station Texas United States 77843

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • Penn State University
  • University of North Carolina, Greensboro

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Linda M Collins, PhD, Penn State University

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
Linda Collins, Distinguished Professor, Department of Human Development and Family Studies Professor, Department of Statistics, Penn State University
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT03408743
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • R01AA022931-2
  • R01AA022931
First Posted:
Jan 24, 2018
Last Update Posted:
Jul 5, 2019
Last Verified:
Jul 1, 2019
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
No
Plan to Share IPD:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by Linda Collins, Distinguished Professor, Department of Human Development and Family Studies Professor, Department of Statistics, Penn State University
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Jul 5, 2019