Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04923230

Pilot Test of Parent-Focused Cannabis-Related Actions and Practices Intervention for Adolescent Marijuana Abuse

Development of the Cannabis Actions and Practices (CAP): A Parent-Focused Intervention to Address Adolescent Marijuana Use

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
120 (actual)
Sponsor
Oregon Research Institute · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
13 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The randomized clinical trial involves the pilot-testing of a theory-guided, empirically based, and low-cost intervention designed for legal medical marijuana-using parents to enhance parenting behaviors that limit youth exposure to marijuana, reduce or halt youth marijuana use, and increase youth awareness of the harmful consequences of marijuana during the youth years. Parents will be randomized to an intervention condition or to a wait list control condition. Pre- and post-intervention assessments will evaluate parent and youth marijuana and other substance use, perceptions and attitudes about marijuana, parenting and family functioning, and youth behavioral health.

Detailed description

The Stage 1A/1B treatment development research will involve a mixed-methods approach to formulating the Cannabis Actions and Practices (CAP) intervention. CAP is a parent-focused intervention to help parent medical marijuana (MM) users address adolescent marijuana use. The pilot evaluation of CAP will be conducted with 60 MM parents who will be randomly assigned to CAP (n=30) or to a delayed CAP wait-list (WL) condition (n=30). Parents and their adolescents will be assessed at baseline and 3, and 6 months after baseline. Primary outcomes will be adolescent marijuana use and perceptions of marijuana harmfulness. Secondary outcomes will include parenting behaviors such as youth exposure to marijuana, communications discouraging adolescent marijuana use, and setting expectations. The investigators will also examine key targets of change, including changes in adolescent behavioral health, parent perceptions of marijuana harmfulness, parent monitoring, parent sense of competence, parent behavioral intentions, and family relationships. Parents assigned to the delayed CAP condition will receive the CAP intervention after a 3-month waiting period, and these participants will receive baseline and 3-month follow-up assessments. The study design and assessment schedule will afford the opportunity for both a between-groups test of the efficacy of CAP between intervention and delayed participants, as well as within-person test of pre- and post-intervention differences in the primary and secondary outcomes among all 60 parent/adolescent dyads. The between-groups arm of the proposed design will provide an initial evaluation of the causal effects of the CAP intervention on primary and secondary marijuana use outcomes. The within-person arm of the design will provide an assessment of the degree to which participating parents improve in targeted areas of skill development and functioning after receiving the CAP intervention. All between-groups and within-person intervention effects will be evaluated within an intent-to-treat analytic framework. The study is designed to evaluate the promise of CAP, a novel theory-guided, empirically based, brief early intervention, for helping parent legal medical marijuana users support marijuana abstinence in their marijuana-involved adolescents.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALCannabis Actions and Practices Resource for ParentsThe Cannabis Actions and Practices (CAP) resource is a parent-focused approach to help MM parents address marijuana use and attitudes by their adolescents. CAP includes information about the effects of marijuana on adolescent behavioral health, brain development, and social functioning. CAP also integrates motivational strategies to foster The CAP intervention focuses on building parenting skills and teaching strategies to: (1) limit adolescent exposure to cannabis products and parent cannabis use at home, (2) improve parent communication about their MM use, expectations about youth marijuana use, and attitudes about the potential harms of adolescent cannabis use, (3) improve monitoring, and (4) increase positive reinforcement for youth abstinence. Parents meet with an interventionist for two individual 75-minute sessions involving presentations, discussions, and behavioral rehearsal of key parenting skills.

Timeline

Start date
2021-06-01
Primary completion
2023-05-31
Completion
2023-06-30
First posted
2021-06-11
Last updated
2023-09-26

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04923230. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.