Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04501471

The Rural African American's Health Project

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
502 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Georgia · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
15 Years – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This is an attention controlled randomized clinical trial testing the efficacy of the Strong African American Families-Teen program. The two arm trial tests SAAF-T, a family centered brief intervention against a similarly designed program that targets nutrition and exercise. The outcomes examined include substance use and risky sexual behavior.

Detailed description

In the past, African American adolescents in rural areas have avoided the high-risk behaviors prevalent among youth in urban areas. Recent epidemiologic data, however, indicate that rural African American youth use substances and engage in high-risk sexual behavior at rates equal to or exceeding those in densely populated inner cities (Kogan, Berkel, Chen, Brody, \& Murry, in press; Milhausen et al., 2003). These risk behaviors predict HIV infection, adolescent parenthood, school dropout, involvement with the criminal justice system, and continued substance use during early adulthood (Friedman et al., 1996; Miller, Boyer, \& Cotton, 2004; St. Lawrence \& Scott, 1996; Tucker, Orlando, \& Ellickson, 2003). No developmentally appropriate, culturally sensitive prevention programs have been developed to deter substance use and high-risk sexual behavior among the several million African American adolescents who live in the rural South (Murry \& Brody, 2004). To address this public health need, Drs. Brody and Murry from the University of Georgia and Drs. DiClemente and Wingood from Emory University designed a multicomponent, family-centered prevention program, the Strong African American Families-Teen program (SAAF-T). We conducted a randomized prevention trial to test the program's efficacy. The sample included 502 rural African American families with a 10th-grade student, half of whom will be assigned randomly to a prevention group and half to an attention-control group. Pre-intervention, post-intervention, and long-term follow-up assessments of adolescents' substance use and high-risk sexual behavior were gathered from the entire sample. Specific aims were to test hypotheses that rural African American adolescents randomly assigned to participate in SAAF-T, compared to attention-control participants, will demonstrate lower rates of substance use and risky sexual behavior.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALSAAF-TParents and youth meet separately during first hour to engage in activities then meet in family groups during the second hours of each session.
BEHAVIORALFuel for FamiliesParents and youth meet separately during first hour to engage in activities then meet in family groups during the second hours of each session.

Timeline

Start date
2005-09-01
Primary completion
2010-09-01
Completion
2010-09-01
First posted
2020-08-06
Last updated
2020-08-14

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04501471. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.