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Parent Education for Young Teen Females

E

Education Development Center, Inc.

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3
Phase 2

Conditions

Prevention

Treatments

Behavioral: parent education

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Industry

Identifiers

NCT00966212
1R01AA014515 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
6241

Details and patient eligibility

About

The study has the potential to improve understanding of the link between early alcohol and sexual initiation and to provide a proven, selective, female-focused intervention for addressing these risks. The goal is to set young women on a course that protects their health and reduces the burden that problem drinking and HIV disease is taking on African American and Latino communities.

Full description

The aims of this study are to to characterize and address the combined risks of early alcohol use and early sexual initiation within a population of urban African American and Latina adolescent females who are at high risk for HIV, AIDS, and other STI. Past research by the investigative team has documented that nearly 10% of females in our target population have initiated sex by fall of 7th grade and more than half have done so by spring of 10thgrade. Although alcohol use is more comparable with national figures, the combination of early alcohol and early sexual initiation is troubling, yet under-addressed by existing interventions. We will develop and test an intervention that builds upon a promising strategy for influencing adolescents: parent education. Three parenting mechanisms shown to influence adolescent risk behavior are targeted: parental monitoring, household rule setting, and communication. Informed by a community advisory board and a series of focus groups, a set of three audio-cds for parents of young adolescents will be developed. Through dramatic role-model stories, these CDs will help parents address alcohol prevention and the link between early alcohol use and sexual initiation and risk taking. Families and middle school daughters will then be enrolled into a randomized pilot test of the intervention's efficacy. Parent and student surveys will be conducted at baseline and 3-month post-intervention follow up to assess whether the intervention is beneficial in terms of promoting positive parenting practices, positive attitudes toward healthy behaviors, and reducing girls' risks.

Enrollment

500 patients

Sex

All

Ages

12+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 8th grade girls and parents at participating schools

Exclusion criteria

  • Non-English speaking

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

500 participants in 2 patient groups

health promotion materials
No Intervention group
print parent education
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Behavioral: parent education

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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