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RecruitingNCT06579781

Evaluation of Parent Toolkit 2.0 (Morehouse Family Health Study)

Rigorous Evaluation of Morehouse School of Medicine's Parent Toolkit 2.0 Intervention (Morehouse Family Health Study)

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
2,000 (estimated)
Sponsor
Child Trends · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
12 Years – 15 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Child Trends will conduct a randomized control trial evaluation of Parent Toolkit 2.0, an innovative intervention for parents and caregivers of middle and high school students. Child Trends will collaborate with Morehouse School of Medicine and Tressa Tucker \& Associates, LLC to implement and evaluate the program with 1,000 parent-teen pairs across Georgia. The program includes three components that will be delivered across a three-week period: (1) an online self-paced Parent Guide with information, tips, tools, and resources on adolescent health, including sexual health; (2) four videos modeling parent-teen communication around sex and contraception; and (3) two group-based sessions for parent participants to discuss program content and improve communication skills. The program aims to increase parent knowledge and parent-teen communication about adolescent health, sexual health, and relationships to help youth adopt health-promoting behaviors such as delaying sexual initiation and increasing contraceptive use.

Detailed description

Child Trends, in partnership with the Morehouse School of Medicine (MSM), will implement Parent Toolkit 2.0. The Georgia Campaign for Adolescent Power \& Potential developed the Parent Toolkit intervention and Morehouse School of Medicine's (MSM) Health Promotion Research Center tested and adapted it through an OPA Innovation Network grant. Child Trends plans to conduct an individual randomized controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the effectiveness of Parent Toolkit 2.0 in delaying sexual initiation and increasing contraceptive use among youth who engage in sexual activity. Youth outcomes are expected to improve as a result of the expansion of parental knowledge and improvement of parent-teen communication about adolescent health, sexual health, and relationships. Associated outcomes will be measured through two surveys, one of which will be distributed immediately after the intervention ends while the other will be administered nine months after the end of the intervention. The intended population is youth ages 12-15 living in rural and micropolitan areas in central, north, and southeast Georgia, and their parents or caregivers. A "caregiver" in this context is defined as someone who lives with the child at least 50 percent of the time and who is one of the main people responsible for the child. The parents or caregivers will be the program participants since they are the intended recipients of all intervention-related resources such as the toolkit, videos, and group-based virtual sessions. By contrast, the youth enrolled in the study will not directly engage in the programming. As a part of this study, treatment group parent/caregiver participants will be asked to: * Review a self-paced parent guide and four videos modeling parent-teen communication on Canvas * Attend two 1-hour group sessions with other parents * Complete baseline and post-intervention surveys * Participate in an optional focus group discussion Control group parent/caregiver participants will be asked to: * Review a self-paced parent guide on Canvas * Complete baseline and post-intervention surveys * Participate in an optional focus group discussion Treatment and control group youth participants will be asked to: * Complete baseline, post-intervention, and nine-month follow-up surveys * Participate in an optional focus group discussion

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMorehouse Family Health Study's Parent Toolkit 2.0Parent Toolkit 2.0 is designed to equip parents and caregivers with skills to talk to their teens about sex and contraception and ultimately influence their teens' decision-making and behaviors around sex. The Georgia Campaign for Adolescent Power \& Potential (GCAPP) developed the Parent Toolkit intervention. Morehouse School of Medicine's (MSM) Health Promotion Research Center tested and adapted it through an OPA Innovation Network grant, creating Parent Toolkit 2.0.
BEHAVIORALMorehouse Family Health Study's General Health GuideGeneral Health Guide provides information to parents on how to promote health in their families.

Timeline

Start date
2024-10-21
Primary completion
2028-04-30
Completion
2028-09-29
First posted
2024-08-30
Last updated
2025-04-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06579781. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.