Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04376346 |
Other study ID # |
18-0574 |
Secondary ID |
R01AA025603 |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
August 4, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
February 25, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
April 2024 |
Source |
University of Colorado, Denver |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Disorders (FASD) result in lifelong disability and are a leading cause
of preventable birth defects in the US. Urban American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) young
women are at high risk for alcohol exposed pregnancies (AEPs) which can cause FASD. In this
project, the inverstigators will test the effectiveness of a culturally adapted mobile health
intervention to prevent AEP, using social media to recruit AIAN young women from urban
centers across the nation.
Description:
The proposed project builds on a prior NIAAA-funded project which used intensive
community-based participatory research (CBPR) methods to adapt CHOICES, an evidence-based
brief alcohol-exposed pregnancy (AEP) prevention intervention supported by the CDC, to
American Indian Youth CHOICES (AIY-C). AIY-C contains features that make it highly amenable
to mHealth approaches, including a framework for integrating diverse cultural teachings, few
modules of short duration, and concrete opportunities for goal-setting and achievement.
Innovative for this population is the plan to recruit young AIAN women from major urban areas
in the US through social media-and to deliver AIY-C via mobile devices, increasingly
ubiquitous among AIAN young adults. While social media recruitment and mHealth interventions
are not new, only very recently have they been used with AIAN populations. The investigators
will partner with urban AIAN organizations to guide us through social media recruitment
strategies, mHealth intervention translation and implementation, and evaluation in urban AIAN
settings. The investigators propose 3 specific aims: (1) Develop and pilot social-media-based
recruitment strategies for urban AIAN young women; (2) translate AIY-C for mHealth delivery
through an iterative and theoretically driven process and pilot the developed translated
mHealth AIY-C intervention; and (3) recruit 700 (final N=525) urban AIAN young women using
identified social media strategies, and conduct an RCT to rigorously evaluate the
effectiveness of the mHealth translation of AIY-C for preventing AEP and FASD.