Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00858065

Adolescent Family-Based Alcohol Prevention

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,228 (actual)
Sponsor
Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
11 Years – 12 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study explores whether giving families a choice of family-based prevention programs to prevent adolescent alcohol use will make a difference in program recruitment, retention, completion, as well as adolescent outcomes. Half of the families are assigned to a traditional random control trial condition and half are assigned to a choice condition. Further, this effectiveness study is being implemented by Kaiser Permanente Health Care system, and explores the issues of implementing such programs within such settings.

Detailed description

This study examines the efficacy and effectiveness of two theory based, universal family prevention programs that have shown efficacy for reducing adolescent alcohol and other drug use: Family Matters (FM) (Bauman, 1996) and (Iowa) Strengthening Families Program (Spoth, 1999) when implemented with families randomly assigned to one of two different conditions: a family "choice" condition (two-groups--FM or SFP) and a traditional random control trial condition (three groups--FM, SFP, and control) called the "assigned" condition. The two conditions (choice vs. assigned) are being compared for differences in: (a) adolescent outcomes related to alcohol use and related behaviors; (b) family characteristics for those who participate; (c) family recruitment, retention and completion rates; d) costs for program implementation. The sample is drawn from families (N=614) with a child age 11 or 12 currently enrolled in Kaiser Permanente Health Care Plan (KP), in one of four medical centers in Northern California. An initial face-to-face interview was conducted (separately) with parent and adolescent prior to program delivery, and two follow-up interviews (12 and 24 months later) are being conducted over the telephone with parent and adolescent (separately). The health care system represents an important new mode for delivering adolescent alcohol use prevention programs to families. The specific aims of this project will provide a real world test of implementation issues and feasibility. Finally, the choice condition represents an innovative, realistic condition under which families make participation decisions outside of the traditional experimental study design protocols. Choosing a treatment based on personal preference may increase patient's sense of autonomy and self-efficacy for behavior change thereby improving outcomes (Williams, 1998; Clarke, 1999). Social cognitive theory and principles of self-regulation provide a connection between these psychological constructs and behavioral choices/health outcomes (Bandura, 1986; Clark \& Zimmerman, 1990).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALStrengthening Families Program (SFP)Prevention program with 7 weekly group sessions for parent and child.
BEHAVIORALFamily MattersPrevention program with 4 booklets for families to do at home with their child.

Timeline

Start date
2005-04-01
Primary completion
2011-07-01
Completion
2011-07-01
First posted
2009-03-09
Last updated
2021-09-29

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00858065. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.