Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT02152033
Home-based Continuing Care for Young Adults Leaving Residential Substance Abuse Treatment
Feasibility and Acceptability of Home-based Continuing Care
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 30 (actual)
- Sponsor
- Treatment Research Institute · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 19 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
The purpose of this project is to develop and test a Home-based Continuing Care intervention that will help parents support the recovery of their Young Adult (YA) child who is leaving residential substance abuse treatment. The two phase pilot study will 1) interview 50 parents and 50 YAs recruited from residential treatment programs and from parent groups to inform the development of the intervention and 2) conduct a two-arm pilot study that will recruit a maximum of 20 parents and their young adult children into one of two conditions (Home-based Continuing Care \[HCC\] intervention group or Services as Usual \[SAU\] comparison group) with the main goal of determining whether conducting such an intervention is acceptable and sustainable, and to collect preliminary efficacy data. We hypothesize that pilot testing will indicate that: (a) HCC is acceptable and potentially sustainable; (b) conducting a randomized clinical trial is feasible, and (c) the magnitude of outcomes from HCC will be clinically meaningful.
Detailed description
Several models of continuing care (CC) have been studied for adolescents and Young Adults (YAs) including online relapse prevention, brief telephone counseling and Assertive Continuing Care (ACC). Five sessions of in-person therapy or brief telephone counseling both have reduced relapse in youth completing treatment relative to a no CC condition, consistent with a growing body of research with adults supporting the efficacy of telephone-based CC (TCC). ACC has been thoroughly evaluated for adolescents. Some applications also have incorporated contingency management (CM) for engaging in activities including needed services; but ACC has not applied CM to biologically-verified abstinence -- an efficacious approach in adult CC. A significant drawback of ACC is that it is quite intensive, requiring extended clinician training and home visits. This increases the costs of the intervention and the difficulty of dissemination and implementation; therefore we plan to develop a less clinician-intensive continuing care model for YAs. The two phase pilot study will 1) interview 50 parents and 50 YAs recruited from residential substance abuse treatment programs and from parent groups to inform the development of the intervention and 2) conduct a two-arm pilot study that will recruit a maximum of 20 parents and their YA children into one of two conditions (Home-based Continuing Care \[HCC\] intervention group or Services as Usual \[SAU\] comparison group) with the main goal of determining whether conducting such an intervention is acceptable and sustainable, and to collect preliminary efficacy data. We hypothesize that pilot testing will indicate that: (a) HCC is acceptable and potentially sustainable; (b) conducting a randomized clinical trial is feasible, and (c) the magnitude of outcomes from HCC will be clinically meaningful.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | Home-based Continuing Care | All sessions will occur over the phone or Cisco WebEx meetings. Parents will participate in 5 individual sessions and 1 joint session with their child (45-50 min. each). Young Adults (YAs) will participate in 1-3 individual meetings (30- 45 min. each) and 1 joint session (45-50 min.). In addition, YAs will be contacted weekly for the first 8 weeks of HCC, then every other week for the remaining 24 weeks (20 calls total). He or she will be asked questions addressing risk and protective factors for relapse. Finally, parents will be trained to collect and test their child's urine sample and deliver incentives to the YA contingent upon biologically-verified abstinence and verified engagement in continuing service plan activities. Urine samples will be collected regularly over a 32 week period. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Services as Usual | Young Adults (YAs) will be told to follow the continuing service plan recommended by the residential treatment program. Parents will be told to support this and be sent information on continuing care developed by the Treatment Research Institute and the Partnership @ Drugfree.org (http://continuingcare.drugfree.org). We will provide no supplemental services during the study. We will train parents; however, on how to collect urine samples for research purposes only. They will not be trained on how to test the urine sample, only how to collect it and mail the sample to our staff for testing. We will offer separate 4 hour-workshops to parents and YAs after they have completed participation as an added study participation incentive for this group. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2014-07-01
- Primary completion
- 2016-09-01
- Completion
- 2016-09-01
- First posted
- 2014-06-02
- Last updated
- 2023-03-28
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02152033. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.