Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01490307

A Family Intervention for Adolescent Problem Behavior (AKA Project Alliance 2)

A Family Intervention for Adolescent Problem Behavior

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
593 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Oregon · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this project is to empirically refine and improve a comprehensive family-centered prevention strategy for reducing and preventing adolescent substance use and other problem behaviors. This project builds on 15 years of programmatic research underlying the development of the Family Check-up model (FCU), originally referred to as the Adolescent Transitions Program (ATP; Dishion \& Kavanagh, 2003), but later expanded as a general approach to mental health treatment for children from ages 2 through 17 (Dishion \& Stormshak, 2007). The FCU model is a multilevel, family-centered strategy delivered within the context of a public school setting that comprehensively links universal, selected, and indicated family interventions. Previous research and the investigators' practical experience working in school settings indicate that the intervention strategy needs improvement in 3 critical areas to build on previous significant effects and to enhance the potential for future dissemination and large-scale implementation:(a) improve the feasibility of both the universal level and the indicated level of the intervention by broadening the intervention components and systematically embedding these components into the current behavioral support systems in the schools; (b) address the transition from middle school to high school, with special attention to academic engagement and reduction of deviant peer clustering; and (c) explicitly incorporate principals of successful interventions with families and young adolescents of diverse ethnic groups into both the universal and indicated models. An additional general goal of this study is to develop, test, and refine a set of research-based instruments that facilitate evaluation, training, implementation, and monitoring of intervention fidelity to maximize the potential success of implementation and large-scale dissemination. Participants include 593 youth and their families recruited from the 6th grade in three public middle schools in Portland, OR. Families were randomly assigned to receive either the FCU intervention model or treatment as usual. Assessments were collected for 5 years through the 10th grade. High school transition planning and intensive intervention efforts occurred in Grades 7-9. The investigators tested the hypothesis that the FCU intervention will reduce the growth of problem behavior and substance use through the enhancement of family management and parent involvement in school.

Detailed description

Specific aims of the current project are to: 1. Establish a Family Resource Center (FRC) that builds on school-wide behavior management; 2. Extend the intervention model to explicitly address the high school transition; 3. Develop intervention components specifically focused on the cultural enhancement with a broader youth population, and test the efficacy of these interventions for reducing risk and enhancing positive adjustment for youth and their families; 4. Evaluate the preventive impact of family engagement on individual differences in the growth of deviant peer involvement, antisocial behavior, and tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana use during the critical transition to high school; and 5. Develop a training and fidelity model related to change.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALFamily Check-UpThe Family Check-Up starts with a rapport-building session that allows therapists to gauge parents' concerns and motivation for change. This is followed by a thorough assessment of individual family strengths and weaknesses, utilizing parent and child questionnaires and family video observations. Parents then receive feedback on the results of the assessment using motivational interviewing techniques. Attention is focused on parents' and children's readiness to change, as well as the delineation of specific change options. Families may continued to receive tailored intervention services using the Everyday Parenting Curriculum.

Timeline

Start date
2006-02-01
Primary completion
2010-01-01
Completion
2011-03-01
First posted
2011-12-12
Last updated
2011-12-12

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01490307. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.