Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00925340

Family Check-Up for Adolescents and Siblings

Effects of the Family Check-Up on Adolescents With Alcohol-Related Events and Their Siblings

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
104 (actual)
Sponsor
Brown University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
12 Years – 18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

A two group randomized design will be used to test the primary hypothesis that the experimental intervention will reduce alcohol consumption and alcohol-related negative consequences significantly more than a comparison family-based psychoeducation condition in both an identified alcohol-using adolescent (12- 18 years old) and his/her teenage sibling (the sibling can be 3 years older or younger than teen with the sibling's age between 12-21 years old). The experimental condition consists of the Family Check-up, while the comparison condition is a less intense parenting psychoeducation program. Time points will include follow-ups at 3, 6, and 12 months.

Detailed description

A total of 175 adolescents, 12 to 18 years old, will be drawn from multiple sites to compare the experimental condition, The Family Check Up(FCU; Dishion \& Kavanagh, 2003) to a family-based psychoeducational program. The Family Check-Up is a selective intervention program that focuses on parents. Its goal is to provide individualized feedback to motivate parents to make improvements in their parenting practices. A unique strength of the FCU is that feedback is individualized and tailored to specific parenting skills as they typically pertain to an identified adolescent in the family. We propose to evaluate the efficacy of the FCU when applied to both an adolescent identified patient (IP) and a sibling close in age. Our rationale for including a sibling close in age derives from a strong empirical base which has shown that: 1) sibling resemblance for alcohol use is high and environmental factors shared by siblings account for substantial portions of variance in adolescent alcohol use; and 2) specific interactional dynamics of the sibling relationship (collusion) are related to teen alcohol use. Dr. Dishion has found that in high-risk families, sibling collusion accounts for variance in problem behavior after controlling for involvement with deviant peers. This connection between ineffective parenting strategies and sibling relationship dynamics in combination creates increased risk for alcohol use by siblings close in age. This notion serves as a foundation to examine the efficacy of a sibling-enhanced FCU intervention with respect to: 1) improvement in parental communication and monitoring; 2) reduction of sibling interactive behaviors that are associated with alcohol use; and 3) reduction of alcohol use in IP adolescents as well as siblings who are currently using alcohol. We will test specified mediators of FCU efficacy in reducing levels of alcohol use at both the parenting level and at the level of sibling dynamics. In order to determine whether other types of family-based interventions might be just as helpful as the more intensive FCU, efficacy of the sibling-enhanced FCU will be compared to a parenting psychoeducational program.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALFamily Check UpThe Family Check-Up provides a thorough assessment of individual family strengths and weaknesses and utilizes principles of motivational interviewing to encourage families to change.
BEHAVIORALPsychoeducationPsychoeducation regarding teen alcohol and drug use in general, along with ways parents can help their children stay safe from using alcohol or drugs.

Timeline

Start date
2008-09-01
Primary completion
2014-07-01
Completion
2014-07-01
First posted
2009-06-22
Last updated
2014-07-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00925340. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.