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Home-based Continuing Care for Young Adults Leaving Residential Substance Abuse Treatment (HCC)

T

Treatment Research Institute

Status

Completed

Conditions

Substance Use Disorders

Treatments

Behavioral: Services as Usual
Behavioral: Home-based Continuing Care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT02152033
R21DA036818 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this project is to develop and test a Home-based Continuing Care intervention that will help parents support the recovery of their Young Adult (YA) child who is leaving residential substance abuse treatment. The two phase pilot study will 1) interview 50 parents and 50 YAs recruited from residential treatment programs and from parent groups to inform the development of the intervention and 2) conduct a two-arm pilot study that will recruit a maximum of 20 parents and their young adult children into one of two conditions (Home-based Continuing Care [HCC] intervention group or Services as Usual [SAU] comparison group) with the main goal of determining whether conducting such an intervention is acceptable and sustainable, and to collect preliminary efficacy data. We hypothesize that pilot testing will indicate that: (a) HCC is acceptable and potentially sustainable; (b) conducting a randomized clinical trial is feasible, and (c) the magnitude of outcomes from HCC will be clinically meaningful.

Full description

Several models of continuing care (CC) have been studied for adolescents and Young Adults (YAs) including online relapse prevention, brief telephone counseling and Assertive Continuing Care (ACC). Five sessions of in-person therapy or brief telephone counseling both have reduced relapse in youth completing treatment relative to a no CC condition, consistent with a growing body of research with adults supporting the efficacy of telephone-based CC (TCC). ACC has been thoroughly evaluated for adolescents. Some applications also have incorporated contingency management (CM) for engaging in activities including needed services; but ACC has not applied CM to biologically-verified abstinence -- an efficacious approach in adult CC. A significant drawback of ACC is that it is quite intensive, requiring extended clinician training and home visits. This increases the costs of the intervention and the difficulty of dissemination and implementation; therefore we plan to develop a less clinician-intensive continuing care model for YAs.

The two phase pilot study will 1) interview 50 parents and 50 YAs recruited from residential substance abuse treatment programs and from parent groups to inform the development of the intervention and 2) conduct a two-arm pilot study that will recruit a maximum of 20 parents and their YA children into one of two conditions (Home-based Continuing Care [HCC] intervention group or Services as Usual [SAU] comparison group) with the main goal of determining whether conducting such an intervention is acceptable and sustainable, and to collect preliminary efficacy data. We hypothesize that pilot testing will indicate that: (a) HCC is acceptable and potentially sustainable; (b) conducting a randomized clinical trial is feasible, and (c) the magnitude of outcomes from HCC will be clinically meaningful.

Enrollment

30 patients

Sex

All

Ages

19+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Parent is 21 years of age or older
  • Young Adult (YA) is 18-25 years of age
  • YA's primary drug of abuse is prescription or other opiates
  • Parent must be the custodial parent or former guardian or other caretaker of the YA
  • YA is in residential treatment
  • Parent and YA plan to live in the same residence during the intervention (32 weeks)
  • Both Parent and YA provide written informed consent and pass the consent quiz testing knowledge of basic elements of informed consent and study requirements (including home urine testing).

Exclusion criteria

  • Parent currently has a substance use disorder (SUD) as determined via DSM-IV-TR criteria or a history of SUD and in recovery for less than 2 years
  • Parent or YA has been diagnosed as having, or behaves in, a manner consistent with having significant cognitive impairment (e.g., an unrelieved psychosis or other serious mental illness)
  • YA reports suicidal ideation with a plan, or engaged in suicidal behavior during residential treatment
  • YA has a recent history of severe violence toward the parent (e.g., involving weapons or hospitalization)
  • YA's residential program provides comprehensive continuing services
  • YA does not consent to participation within 2 weeks of discharge

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

30 participants in 2 patient groups

Home-based Continuing Care
Experimental group
Description:
The components of Home-based Continuing Care (HCC) include brief parent training, brief Young Adult (YA) orientation and recovery planning, telephone-based continuing care (TCC) and home-based contingency management. Both parent and YA participants will attend sessions with a family specialist.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Home-based Continuing Care
Services as Usual
Other group
Description:
YAs completing residential care usually are referred to continuing outpatient services and/or self-help groups.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Services as Usual

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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