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Adventure: Teacher Delivered Personality-targeted Interventions for Substance Misuse

K

King's College London

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3
Phase 2

Conditions

Panic Disorder
Conduct Disorder
Drug Abuse
Alcohol Abuse
Depression

Treatments

Behavioral: Personality-targeted interventions

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00776685
Adventure

Details and patient eligibility

About

Several personality factors have been shown to be associated with risk for alcohol and substance misuse, and differentiate substance abusers based on clinical profile, treatment response and susceptibility to other forms of mental illness. Personality-targeted interventions have been found to have significant preventative effects on onset and growth of drinking, binge-drinking and drinking problems in adolescents attending mainstream schools (Conrod, Castellanos & Mackie, 2008). The interventions concurrently reduced personality-specific emotional and behavioural problems (Castellanos & Conrod, 2006), and prevented the onset and escalation of drug-use over a two-year period (Conrod, Castellanos-Ryan & Strang, 2010). This cluster randomised controlled trial aims to examine whether these results can be replicated when interventions are delivered by trained educational professionals. In addition, the trial will evaluate the broader impact of the programme on cigarette smoking, school attendance, academic achievement and school-wide behaviours.

Full description

The Adventure study aims to examine whether educational professionals such as teachers, mentors or individuals in a pastoral role, who are trained in carrying out personality-targeted interventions will be effective in reducing problem behaviours in a group of adolescents.

20 schools in London, U.K. were recruited for the trial, and over 2000 adolescents (mean age 13.7 years) consented to participate in the survey and intervention phases of the trial. Schools were randomly assigned to control or intervention condition, and students in intervention schools who met the criteria for any of the 4 personality risk subscales of the Substance Use Risk Profile Scale (Negative Thinking, Anxiety Sensitivity, Sensation Seeking and Impulsivity) were invited to participate in a personality-targeted intervention by trained members of staff from their schools. All participants were invited to complete follow-up surveys at 6-month intervals for 2 years. The remaining 55% of low risk students in the grad were also followed to examine population-level effects of the intervention as well.

The main outcome measures of this RCT are alcohol and illicit drug outcomes. Secondary measures include mental health symptoms, risky behaviour, school attainment and attendance, and school-wide behaviours.

It is hypothesised that teacher-delivered personality-targeted interventions will have similar preventative effects on alcohol and drug use as reported by Conrod et al (2008, 2010), in addition to the personality-specific intervention effects reported by Castellanos & Conrod (2006). In addition, broader effects of the intervention on academic achievement and school-wide behaviour will be examined in this trial, both at the individual level and at the population-level.

Enrollment

3,190 patients

Sex

All

Ages

13 to 16 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Secondary school student

Exclusion criteria

  • None

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Factorial Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

3,190 participants in 4 patient groups

learning to cope with your impulsivity
Experimental group
Description:
Cognitive-behavioural intervention targeting impulsive personality
Treatment:
Behavioral: Personality-targeted interventions
learning to cope with your sensation seeking
Experimental group
Description:
cognitive behavioural intervention designed to help sensation seeking youth manage their need for stimulation and excitement.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Personality-targeted interventions
learning to cope with your anxiety sensitivity
Experimental group
Description:
cognitive behavioural intervention teaching anxiety sensitive youth to manager their sensitivity to threat and anxiety.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Personality-targeted interventions
learning to manage your negative thinking
Experimental group
Description:
cognitive behavioural intervention targeting pessimistic and negative thinking in hopeless youth
Treatment:
Behavioral: Personality-targeted interventions

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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