Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT03831139

Cultural Adaptation of the TIM&SARA Prevention Program

What Makes Prevention Work? Cultural Adaptation of an Effective Program for African-American Adolescents

Status
Terminated
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
740 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Louisville · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Disparities between African-American and European-American youth regarding academic outcomes, mental health, and physical health exist. Depression, a very common mental health problem, plays a central role by impacting academic outcomes and cardiovascular health. Thus, a program that successfully reduces the likelihood for youths to develop depression should also reduce problems with academic outcomes and physical health and therefore reduce disparity in all three domains. Research demonstrates that European-American youth benefit more from programs preventing the development of depression than their African-American peers. Thus, the goals of this project are to (a) identify mechanisms that may result in differential program effectiveness across racial groups, and (b) adapt such a program (TIM\&SARA) so youth from diverse racial backgrounds benefit similarly. Freshmen in an urban high-school will participate in TIM\&SARA, fill out surveys and give biological data in saliva.

Detailed description

Already in adolescence, substantial disparities between African-Americans and European-Americans regarding academic outcomes, mental health, and physical health like cardiovascular health exist. While these domains are often treated as unrelated, they influence each other in a way that the disparity in one variable increases the likelihood for disparity in the others. Depression, a very common mental health problem, plays a central role by impacting academic outcomes and cardiovascular health. Thus, a program that successfully reduces the likelihood for youths to develop depression should also reduce problems with academic outcomes and physical health and therefore reduce disparity in all three domains. Unfortunately, research demonstrates that European-American youth benefit more from programs preventing the development of depression than their African-American peers. Thus, the main goals of this research project are to (a) identify mechanisms that may result in differential prevention program effectiveness across youth race groups, and (b) adapt such a program (TIM\&SARA) so youth from diverse racial backgrounds benefit similarly. In this project, the depression prevention program TIM\&SARA will be implemented as part of the normal school curriculum for freshmen in an urban high-school. The differential effects of the program on African-American and European-American youths will be examined using surveys and biological data in saliva.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALTIM&SARA

Timeline

Start date
2015-08-01
Primary completion
2019-03-01
Completion
2019-03-01
First posted
2019-02-05
Last updated
2022-07-05

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03831139. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.