Drug Abuse Clinical Trial
— MTCOfficial title:
Multi-court Trial of NBP to Prevent Substance Abuse and Mental Health Disorders
Verified date | November 2023 |
Source | Arizona State University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
This application requests funding to conduct a randomized effectiveness trial of The New Beginnings Program (NBP) delivered through a partnership of domestic relations courts, community service providers and the NBP research team. This is the first attempt to offer the population of families seeking divorce an evidence-based prevention program shown to have long-term effects on youth problem outcomes. It is estimated that over a third of U.S. children experience parental divorce, which confers elevated risk for multiple problems in childhood and adulthood including substance use and abuse, smoking, mental health problems, high risk sexual behavior, and physical health problems. Efficacy trials of the NBP found positive effects at post-test, 6-year and 15-year follow-ups. For example, at 6-year follow-up the participation in NBP led to reductions in marijuana, drug and alcohol use and a 37% reduction in prevalence of diagnosed mental disorder; and reductions in externalizing problems, internalizing problems and high risk sexual behavior. Positive effects also occurred for grade point average (GPA) and self esteem. For many of the effects of the NBP, the effects were stronger for youth who were at higher risk at program entry. Many of the program effects were mediated through the program effects to strengthen parenting. Funded by an Advanced Center for Intervention and Services Research grant (NIMH P30 MH068685) the investigators modified the NBP to translate it from a prototype tested in efficacy trials into a program that can be effectively delivered by community service providers and one that is appropriate across diverse cultural groups, and fathers as well as mothers. Pilot testing of the modified NBP and training and monitoring systems has demonstrated that they are highly acceptable to parents and providers. The investigators also developed and experimentally tested a system of parent recruitment that was found to be effective in getting parents to enroll (sign up to participate) in the NBP but, similar to other prevention parenting programs, initiation (attendance at one or more sessions) in the NBP in the pilot was low.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 2415 |
Est. completion date | January 31, 2017 |
Est. primary completion date | August 4, 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 3 Years to 18 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Filing for divorce or modification of a divorce decree within the past two years - If never married, being in court to establish or change a parenting time agreement following separation in the past two years - Having at least one child aged 3 to 18 with whom the parent spends three or more hours each week or one overnight every other week - Being able to complete the program and assessments in English - Not being mandated to a parenting class by the Juvenile Court or Child Protective Services. Exclusion Criteria: - Parents who received a divorce more than two years prior and did not have any court involvement in the past two years. - Parents who could not complete the program or assessments in English - Parents were mandated to a parenting program by Child Protective Services of Juvenile Court |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Sharlene Wolchik | Tempe | Arizona |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Arizona State University | National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Parent report of Interparental conflict | Parents reported on interparental conflict using four items from the Children's Perception of Interparental Conflict (a = ..90) ((Grych, Seid, & Fincham, 1992). | Past month | |
Other | Child report of exposure to interparental conflict | Children reported on exposure to interparental conflict using 13 items from the Children's Parent Interparental Conflict scale (Grych, Seid & Fincham, 1992) and two items developed for this study to assess parents arguing in from of them (a = ..87) | Past month | |
Other | Child report of being caught in the middle | Children report on being caught in the middle of their parents arguments using a nine item scale. Seven of the items on this scale were from the Caught in the Middle Scale (Buchanan, Maccoby & Dornbusch, 1991). Two items from this scale were child reports of their exposure to badmouthing from the Divorce Events Schedule Child (Sandler, Wolchik & Braver, 1988). Reliability of this single nine item scale was good ((a = ..78). | Past month | |
Primary | Child Behavior Checklist Internalizing Problems | Parents completed the Child Behavior Checklist which has previously shown good reliability and validity (CBCL; Achenbach & Rescorla, 2001) for children aged 6 to 18 (a = .89 ) for internalizing, problems. | The time frame was the past month | |
Primary | Brief Problem Monitor Internalizing | Children aged 9 or older completed the Brief Problem Monitor (BPM; Achenbach, McConaughy, Ivanova, & Rescorla, 2011) to assess internalizing (six items, a = .79), | Time Frame was the past month | |
Primary | Child Behavior Checklist Externalizing Problems | Parents completed the Child Behavior Checklist which has previously shown good reliability and validity (CBCL; Achenbach & Rescorla, 2001) for children aged 6 to 18 (a =.90, and .95 for externalizing problems) | The timeframe was the past month | |
Primary | Parent report of total child behavior problems | A single measure of parent total behavior problems was calculated as the sum of the T scores across parent report of total behavior problems from the CBCL and Pre-school CBCL across the broad age range (T. M. Achenbach, personal communication, 2015). | The time frame was the past month | |
Primary | Brief Problem Monitor Externalizing | Children aged 9 or older completed the Brief Problem Monitor (BPM; Achenbach, McConaughy, Ivanova, & Rescorla, 2011) to assess externalizing (seven items, a = .71). | The time frame is past month | |
Primary | Brief Problem Monitor Total Problems | Children aged 9 or older completed the Brief Problem Monitor (BPM; Achenbach, McConaughy, Ivanova, & Rescorla, 2011) to assess total problems (19 items, a = .86). | The time frame is past month | |
Primary | Preschool Child Behavior Checklist Internalizing Problems | Parents completed the Preschool Child Behavior Checklist (Pre-CBCL; Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000) for children aged 3 to 5 (a = .89) for internalizing problems) | Past month | |
Primary | Parent report of child internalizing problems | T scores were calculated for CBCL and Pre-CBCL internalizing problem subscales based on child age and gender and combined to assess internalizing across the broad age range (T. M. Achenbach, personal communication, 2015). | Past month | |
Primary | Parent report of child externalizing problems | Parents completed the Preschool Child Behavior Checklist (Pre-CBCL; Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000) for children aged 3 to 5 (a = .91 for externalizing problems). | Past month | |
Primary | Parent report of child externalizing problems | Parent report of child externalizing problems was scored as the sum of T scores for the CBCL and Pre-CBCL externalizing subscales based on child age and gender and combined to assess internalizing, externalizing, and total problems across the broad age range (T. M. Achenbach, personal communication, 2015). | Past month | |
Secondary | Parent Report of Parent child relationship quality | Parent-child relationship quality was assessed using factor scores from a two-factor confirmatory factor analysis model. Indicators of parent-child relationship quality were involvement (six items, Menning, 2006), family routines (seven items, Jensen, et al., 1983), parent-child communication (10 items open communication subscale, Barnes and Olsen, 1982), closeness (single item, Stewart, 2003) and acceptance subscale of the CRPBI (16 items, Shaefer, 1965). The two-factor model closely fit the data at pretest, ?2 (17) = 69.8. | Time frame was the past month | |
Secondary | Parent Report of Rejection | We treated parent report of rejection as a separate measure because it did not load highly with the other indicators of parent-child relationship. Parent report of rejection was assessed using the rejection subscale of the CRPBI (16 items, Schaefer, 1965) | Time frame was the past month | |
Secondary | Monitoring | Parent report of monitoring as a separate measure because parents completed this measure only for children age 9 or older. Monitoring was assessed using the Child Monitoring Scale (11 items, Hetherington et al., 1992). | Time frame was the past month | |
Secondary | Parent report of Discipline | Parent report of discipline was assessed as a single measure which aggregated the scores from multiple indicators using factor scores from a two-factor confirmatory factor analysis model. The two-factor model closely fit the data at pretest, ?2 (17) = 69.8.
Indicators of discipline that loaded on the discipline factor were consistency subscale of the CRPBI (16 items Schaefer, 1965), follow-through subscale of the Oregon Discipline Scale (11 items, Oregon Social Learning Center, 1991), and appropriate use of discipline (ratio) from the Oregon Discipline Scale (14 items. Oregon Social Learning Center). |
Time frame was the past month | |
Secondary | Child report of positive parenting | Child report of positive parenting was assessed as a single factor score which aggregated the scores from multiple indicators as the factor score based on a a confirmatory factor analysis which found that a single factor model had a good fit to the data ?2 (17) = 58.25, RMSEA = .07. CFI = .98. The indicators on this model were child reports of involvement (six items, Menning, 2006), family routines (7 items, Jensen et al., 1983), open communication subscale of the Parent-Adolescent Communication Scale (10 items, Barnes a\& Olson, 1982), closeness was measured using a single item (Stewart, 2003), the acceptance subscale of the CRPBI (16 items, Schaefer, 1965), the rejection subscale of the CRPBI (16 items, Schaefer, 1965), the consistency of discipline subscale of the CRPBI (8 items, Schaefer, 1965), and the Child Monitoring Scale (11 items, Hetherington et al., 1992). | Time Frame was the past month |
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