Depression Clinical Trial
— PAL-2Official title:
A Family Intervention for Adolescent Problem Behavior
Verified date | December 2011 |
Source | University of Oregon |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | United States: Institutional Review Board |
Study type | Interventional |
The goal of this project is to empirically refine and improve a comprehensive
family-centered prevention strategy for reducing and preventing adolescent substance use and
other problem behaviors. This project builds on 15 years of programmatic research underlying
the development of the Family Check-up model (FCU), originally referred to as the Adolescent
Transitions Program (ATP; Dishion & Kavanagh, 2003), but later expanded as a general
approach to mental health treatment for children from ages 2 through 17 (Dishion &
Stormshak, 2007). The FCU model is a multilevel, family-centered strategy delivered within
the context of a public school setting that comprehensively links universal, selected, and
indicated family interventions. Previous research and the investigators' practical
experience working in school settings indicate that the intervention strategy needs
improvement in 3 critical areas to build on previous significant effects and to enhance the
potential for future dissemination and large-scale implementation:(a) improve the
feasibility of both the universal level and the indicated level of the intervention by
broadening the intervention components and systematically embedding these components into
the current behavioral support systems in the schools; (b) address the transition from
middle school to high school, with special attention to academic engagement and reduction of
deviant peer clustering; and (c) explicitly incorporate principals of successful
interventions with families and young adolescents of diverse ethnic groups into both the
universal and indicated models. An additional general goal of this study is to develop,
test, and refine a set of research-based instruments that facilitate evaluation, training,
implementation, and monitoring of intervention fidelity to maximize the potential success of
implementation and large-scale dissemination.
Participants include 593 youth and their families recruited from the 6th grade in three
public middle schools in Portland, OR. Families were randomly assigned to receive either the
FCU intervention model or treatment as usual. Assessments were collected for 5 years through
the 10th grade. High school transition planning and intensive intervention efforts occurred
in Grades 7-9.
The investigators tested the hypothesis that the FCU intervention will reduce the growth of
problem behavior and substance use through the enhancement of family management and parent
involvement in school.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 593 |
Est. completion date | March 2011 |
Est. primary completion date | January 2010 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: Parents of all sixth grade students across 2 cohorts at 3 public middle schools were invited to participate in this study. |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of Oregon-Child and Family Center | Portland | Oregon |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Oregon | National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | growth in substance use | The Student Survey was collected from all youth, regardless of treatment condition, annually across 6th-10th grades. It includes 6 questions about the frequency with which the adolescent used 5 substances in the last month: cigarettes, chewing tobacco or snuff, alcohol (overall quantity and most at one time), marijuana or hashish, and other hard drugs. Growth curve modeling will be used to represent change in substance use across time. | 5 time points (6th grade, 7th grade, 8th grade, 9th grade, and 10th grade). Avg time between t1 and t2 was 15.1 mo.; avg time between t2 and t3 was 11.9 mo.; avg time between t3 and t4 was 11.4 mo.; avg time between t4 and t5 was 11.6 mo. | No |
Primary | growth in antisocial behavior | The Student Survey was collected from all youth, regardless of treatment condition, annually across 6th-10th grades. It includes youth reports of engagement in antisocial behavior during the past month, measured by averaging across 11 items on a 6-point scale ranging from "never" to "more than 20 times" during the past month. The items included content such as lying to parents, staying out all night without permission, stealing, carrying a weapon, and physical aggression. Growth curve modeling will be used to represent change in antisocial behavior across time. | 5 time points (6th grade, 7th grade, 8th grade, 9th grade, and 10th grade). Avg time between t1 and t2 was 15.1 mo.; avg time between t2 and t3 was 11.9 mo.; avg time between t3 and t4 was 11.4 mo.; avg time between t4 and t5 was 11.6 mo. | No |
Primary | growth in deviant peer involvement | The Student Survey was collected from all youth, regardless of treatment condition, annually across 6th-10th grades. It includes youth reports of the behavior of the friends with whom they have spent the most time in the past month. Youth are asked how many of these friends have engaged in 11 behaviors in the past month, using a 5-point scale ranging from "none" to "4 or more." The items include content such as selling illegal drugs, carrying a knife or handgun, and getting arrested. Growth curve modeling will be used to represent change in deviant peer involvement across time. | 5 time points (6th grade, 7th grade, 8th grade, 9th grade, and 10th grade). Avg time between t1 and t2 was 15.1 mo.; avg time between t2 and t3 was 11.9 mo.; avg time between t3 and t4 was 11.4 mo.; avg time between t4 and t5 was 11.6 mo. | No |
Secondary | growth in family management skills | The family assessment was collected from families who received the FCU; it includes caregiver and child assessment packets and parent-child videotaped interactions. Caregiver and child assessments include reports of family management, including parental monitoring and parent-school involvement. Videotaped interactions are evaluated and each family rated on factors such as supervision, listening skills, use of encouragement, and problem solving. Growth curve modeling will be used to represent change in family management skills across time. | 3 time points (7th grade, summer after 8th grade, and 10th grade). Average time between t1 and t2 was 15.4 months; average time between t2 and t3 was 17.0 months. | No |
Secondary | positive change in family relationship quality | The family assessment was collected from families who received the FCU; it includes caregiver and child assessment packets and parent-child videotaped interactions. Caregiver and child assessments include reports of positive relationship and family conflict. Videotaped interactions include seven 5-8 minute discussions on family-related matters. These interactions are evaluated and each family rated on positive relationship and family conflict. Growth curve modeling will be used to represent change in family relationship quality across time. | 3 time points (7th grade, summer after 8th grade, and 10th grade). Average time between t1 and t2 was 15.4 months; average time between t2 and t3 was 17.0 months. | No |
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