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PHAT Life: Preventing HIV/AIDS Among Teens in Juvenile Justice

University of Illinois logo

University of Illinois

Status

Completed

Conditions

HIV

Treatments

Behavioral: Health Promotion Control
Behavioral: PHAT Life Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT02647710
5R01MD005861-05 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
R01MD005861

Details and patient eligibility

About

PHAT Life: Preventing HIV/AIDS Among Teens, is a uniquely-tailored intervention designed for recently-arrested juvenile offenders on probation. The program will teach teens about HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted infections, and safer decision-making. The PHAT Life Research Study is a 2-arm randomized controlled trial of the PHAT Life Intervention. The investigators will test and compare PHAT Life to the health promotion control group on adolescent risky sexual behavior, substance use, and theoretical mediators.

Full description

High rates of mental illness, HIV/AIDS/STI, and incarceration among African Americans (AA) reflect significant health disparities, particularly among youth. Teens in juvenile justice are disproportionately AA, and compared to the general population, juvenile offenders (JO) report more risky sexual behavior, drug and alcohol use, and psychiatric disorders, and are more likely to test positive for STIs. Still, few empirically-supported, theoretically-driven programs exist to address their negative health outcomes. This proposal addresses these health disparities by testing an innovative and uniquely tailored HIV/AIDS/STI, mental health, and substance use program designed for and pilot tested with recently arrested 13 - 17 year-old urban males and females (85% African American, 14% Latino/a) released on probation. PHAT Life was derived from a carefully staged process that included an active, diverse, multi-disciplinary advisory board, a youth advisory board, focus groups, two pilot tests, extensive feedback, and a series of curriculum revisions over three years. The R34 established feasibility and acceptability, revealed positive youth and stakeholder feedback, and yielded good preliminary outcomes at 3-month follow-up (e.g., increased condom use) to justify an efficacy trial. This application proposes a 2-arm randomized controlled trial to test PHAT Life versus a health promotion program with recently arrested 13-17 year-old male and female, mostly ethnic minority JO (as representative of Cook County) on probation in Chicago. The investigators will use the procedures and methods established in the developmental study to recruit, enroll, assess, track, and intervene with teens. Investigators will randomly assign youth to PHAT Life (N=150) or a health promotion control group (N=150). The interventions will be delivered in single sex groups of 5 - 7 teens at Evening Reporting Centers. Assessments will occur at baseline, 6-, and 12-months post-treatment, and participants will be screened for three common STIs (Chlamydia, Gonorrhea, Trichamonas) at baseline and 12-month follow-up. All youth who test positive for an STI will receive single dose antibiotic treatment free of charge. An intent-to-treat analysis will be used to test and compare PHAT Life to the health promotion control group on adolescent risky sexual behavior, substance use, and theoretical mediators. This study answers a compelling need for innovative prevention programs that address the intersecting health disparities of mental illness and HIV/AIDS/STIs among youth in juvenile justice. Without intervention, these teens continue to engage in risk behaviors post-release, amplifying their own and their partner's risk for HIV/AIDS/STIs. The lasting effects on community well-being, individual employment prospects, and neighborhood health are profound, but effective programs can alter the negative developmental trajectories of this very high-risk population and begin to redress existing health disparities.

Enrollment

349 patients

Sex

All

Ages

13 to 17 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • male or female gender
  • placed on probation following arrest
  • remanded to a probation program
  • 13-17 years old
  • both adolescent and parent are fluent English speakers
  • not a ward of the state (DCFS Ward).

Exclusion criteria

  • are unable to understand the consent/assent process
  • do not speak English, because instruments are normed for English speakers
  • do not assent; d) legal guardians do not consent to teens' participation
  • are not 13 -17 years old
  • are not on probation or remanded to a probation program
  • are Wards of the state (DCFS Ward)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

349 participants in 2 patient groups

PHAT Life Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
PHAT Life: Preventing HIV/AIDS Among Teens, is a uniquely-tailored intervention designed for recently-arrested juvenile offenders on probation. The program will teach teens about HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted infections, and safer decision-making. PHAT Life draws on social learning theory and a Social-Personal Framework to address individual and social mechanisms related to HIV-risk, including emotion regulation, peer norms, partner communication, relationship characteristics, and HIV/AIDS/STI and substance use knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs.
Treatment:
Behavioral: PHAT Life Intervention
Health Promotion Control
Active Comparator group
Description:
A health promotion program focusing on nutrition, physical activity, substance use, and sexual health.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Health Promotion Control

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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