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Adolescent Behavior clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Adolescent Behavior.

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NCT ID: NCT03379090 Completed - Physical Activity Clinical Trials

Neighborhood Influence on Parenting Practices Regarding Youth Outdoor Play

Start date: March 26, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Parental constraint of outdoor play may be fueling unhealthy emotional and physical development in today's children and adolescents. Time spent outdoors is a key determinant of unstructured play and overall physical activity levels, both of which are crucial to optimal development in youth. Modern barriers - such as crime, poor social ties among neighbors, and unsafe physical environments - constrain parental practices and reduce opportunities for outdoor play in children and youth. Low levels of perceived collective efficacy, a measure of perceived neighborhood cohesion and the collective capacity to solve neighborhood problems, has been proposed as a social environmental factor that constrains outdoor play by parents either attempting to avoid potentially dangerous situations or using defensive behavior by upgrading security measures. Moreover, incivilities in the neighborhood physical environment (e.g. litter, graffiti, blighted property) may influence parents' perceived collective efficacy. Consequently, a child's ability to achieve the recommended minimum of 60 minutes of daily physical activity may be limited by a complex interaction between neighborhood social and physical environmental factors and the extent to which parents respond by constraining offspring outdoor play. The central hypothesis of this research is that modifiable factors in the neighborhood social and physical environment result in parental constraint of offspring outdoor play, which reduces overall physical activity during critical years of development. This research will use qualitative methods to generate a comprehensive understanding of how and which environmental factors play a crucial role in parental constraint of outdoor play and promote low levels of within-neighborhood physical activity. This ancillary study will recruit 32 parents/guardians of participants from the parent study, Translational Investigation of Growth and Everyday Routines in Kids (TIGER Kids) Study (USDA 3092-51000-056-04A), to participate in in-depth interviews. My ultimate goal is to use knowledge gained from this ancillary study to generate community-based interventions that will target neighborhood factors to successfully reduce parental constraints on outdoor play.

NCT ID: NCT03371875 Completed - Adolescent Behavior Clinical Trials

Automated Youth-To-Adult Transition Planning Using Health Information ...

Start date: December 15, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study seeks to automate the process of youth to adult transition using an existing computerized decision support system in primary care. Subjects will complete the TRAQ readiness questionnaire after the age of 14, and then their responses will be flagged for the physician to review and provide additional transition related educational materials. Once transition is necessary, the system sends an automated email to the responsible party in the office.

NCT ID: NCT03370393 Recruiting - Adolescent Behavior Clinical Trials

Prevention of Adolescent Risky Behaviors: Neural Markers of Intervention Effects

Start date: December 11, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Adolescence is a time of biological and behavioral changes that can lead to risky and dangerous behaviors, and African-American youth are highly vulnerable to the consequences of risky behavior, including HIV/AIDS and violence, leading to premature death. The investigators previously showed that an intervention program reduces HIV-risk vulnerability behaviors in many African-American youth. The investigators aim to measure how the program affects different regions of the brain in order to better prevent or reduce such risky behaviors among African-American youth.

NCT ID: NCT03368456 Completed - Adolescent Behavior Clinical Trials

Preventing HIV/STI in Urban Adolescents Via an mHealth Primary Care Intervention

Start date: May 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study evaluates the preliminary efficacy of an innovative mobile-health (mHealth) intervention (hereon referred to as S4E) to improve human immunodeficiency virus and sexually transmitted infection testing and reduce HIV/STI risk behaviors in a clinic sample (n=100) of at-risk youth ages 14-21 living in Southeast Michigan. A Stage I randomized control trial will be conducted to examine the preliminary efficacy of S4E, relative to Usual Care (UC), over a period of six months.

NCT ID: NCT03304574 Recruiting - Adolescent Behavior Clinical Trials

CheckED Yourself Study

Start date: March 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

During adolescence, the most common causes of morbidity and mortality are related to risky behaviors. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that adolescents be screened for these behaviors during primary care visits, but many adolescents do not receive the recommended risk behavior screening and counseling, in part because they are infrequently seen in primary care. The objective of this study is to evaluate if the electronic health screening tool, which includes an electronic health assessment with integrated personalized feedback, reduces risk behaviors in adolescents seen in the Emergency Department (ED).

NCT ID: NCT03298685 Completed - Cystic Fibrosis Clinical Trials

SAFETIM-needs : Exploring Adolescent's and Parent's Needs During Transition in French CF Centers

SAFETIM-needs
Start date: June 12, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

prospective multicentric study protocol in french CF center, exploring adolescent avec parents needs during transition from pediatric CF center to adult CF center

NCT ID: NCT03288896 Completed - Alcohol Drinking Clinical Trials

Alerta Alcohol. Web-based Computer-tailored Intervention for Binge-drinking Prevention in Spanish Adolescents

Start date: November 1, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study consists in the the design, implementation, and evaluation of the first web-based computer tailored intervention program aimed at the prevention of binge drinking in Spanish adolescents (Alerta Alcohol). A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial is conducted to test the effectiveness of Alerta Alcohol in students aged 16 to 18 years across 16 high schools from Andalusia (southern Spain), which are randomized either to the experimental or the control condition (EC and CC).

NCT ID: NCT03283033 Terminated - Obesity Clinical Trials

School Lunch Salad Bars and Fruit and Vegetable Consumption

Start date: October 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators propose an efficacy study (i.e., do salad bars work under controlled conditions in naturalistic settings) to test whether introducing salad bars in elementary, middle, and high schools that have never had salad bars affects students' FV consumption and waste during lunch. A cluster randomized controlled trial will test new salad bars against controls for 6 wks, with/without an additional 4-wk marketing phase .

NCT ID: NCT03276221 Completed - Adolescent Behavior Clinical Trials

Cognitive Recovery With Cannabis Abstinence Among High School-Aged Adolescents

Start date: August 7, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will use a randomized controlled design to test whether 30 days of cannabis abstinence, compared to 30 days of monitoring, is associated with improvements in cognitive functioning. Non-using controls will also be enrolled to determine the clinical significance of any cognitive improvements with abstinence.

NCT ID: NCT03270943 Completed - Adolescent Behavior Clinical Trials

The S.M.A.R.T. Project: Stress Management and Resilience Training for Teens

Start date: September 5, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The rate of depression increases markedly over the course of adolescence. Adolescents struggling with depression are often set on a maladaptive behavior trajectory which may lead to academic challenges, substance abuse, risky sexual behavior, impairment in relationship building, and suicidality. The S.M.A.R.T Project (Stress Management and Resilience Training for Teens) is designed to learn about mood in teens, and whether emotional well-being can be improved with an 8 week class. The study proposes to refine and test the feasibility of a mindfulness-based self-compassion training program for adolescents who are experiencing subsyndromal depression, comparing it with a "healthy lifestyles" group program as a comparison attention-control for the treatment intervention. Secondarily, the study will explore the impact of these programs on measures of psychopathology and well-being (i.e. depressive symptoms and resilience).