Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00496691

HIV Prevention for Youth With Severe Mental Illness

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
718 (actual)
Sponsor
Rhode Island Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
13 Years – 18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This 4-year competing continuation will extend the follow-up for 750 subjects enrolled in a randomized interventions trial, Project STYLE: "HIV Prevention for Youth with Severe Mental Illness" (R01, MH 63008). Extending the follow-up from one year to 36 months will 1) discern the long-term impact of the Project STYLE interventions and 2) permit complex modeling of the predictors and trajectories of sexual health (delay of sex) and risk (incident STIs). Adolescents, particularly those in mental health treatment, are at risk for HIV because of sexual and substance behaviors. Parent-child communication about sexual topics and parental supervision are associated with delays in the onset of sexual activity and more responsible sexual behavior; thus, the parent project, Project STYLE, is a randomized trial that is evaluating the comparative efficacy of three interventions: a) family-based HIV prevention intervention, b) adolescent-only HIV prevention intervention, and c) general health promotion intervention. This multi-site project (Rhode Island Hospital, Emory University, and the University of Illinois at Chicago) is enrolling an ethnically/racially/geographically diverse group of 750 adolescents in outpatient mental health treatment and their parents. Subjects receive a full day group intervention on the day of randomization, return in two weeks for an individual session, participate in a half day booster session three months later, and are assessed six and 12 months after the intervention. This application offers a unique opportunity to assess this already ascertained sample at three additional points (24,30, and 36 months). This is important because few studies have examined the longer-term predictors of the delay of sex and incident STIs over 36 months using a comprehensive array of family functioning, family monitoring/communication, and trauma history. Additionally, this continuation will provide important data concerning the long-term impact of Project STYLE's theoretically based HIV prevention programs which are designed to maintain safe sexual behaviors. The Family-Based program has increased parent/adolescent sexual communication and reduced adolescent unprotected sex after six months and extended assessment will determine whether these benefits are maintained over time.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALFamily-based HIV prevention programcomparison between parent-child intervention targeting parent-teen sexual communication, condom use skills, and assertiveness training to an adolescent-only intervention that targets similar constructs minus parent-teen sexual communication and a general health promotion intervention

Timeline

Start date
2002-04-01
Primary completion
2010-12-01
Completion
2010-12-01
First posted
2007-07-04
Last updated
2016-05-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00496691. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.