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Puerto Rico Cuidalos Parent-adolescent Program

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University of Pennsylvania

Status

Completed

Conditions

Sexually Transmitted Diseases
HIV/AIDS and Infections
Pregnancy Prevention

Treatments

Behavioral: Parental Communication intervention
Behavioral: Health promotion control condition

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03063385
7R01NR013505 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
820216

Details and patient eligibility

About

Latino adolescents are at high risk for HIV/AIDS, other sexually transmitted infections (STIs), and unintended pregnancies. Puerto Rican adolescents, in particular, experience disparities in these areas, yet few adolescent and even fewer parent interventions have been developed to address these important issues with this underserved population. Parent-adolescent programs are an effective approach to reduce adolescent sexual risk behavior and associated negative consequences. A web-based parent communication intervention provides an opportunity to strengthen and enhance programs that are designed for adolescents by providing additional support for safer sex decisions, and to increase parents' access to sexual health education programs by decreasing barriers that keep them from participating in these interventions (e.g., low cost, can be viewed privately, at parents convenience, minimizes competing time with work and family). The purpose of this proposed study is to evaluate a brief theoretically informed (i.e., Ecodevelopmental Theory, Theory of Reasoned Action/Planned Behavior, Social Cognitive Theory 1-6), culturally appropriate, and linguistically tailored web-based parental communication program, Cuídalos ("Take care of them"), designed to improve parent-adolescent sexual communication and reduce adolescent sexual risk behavior. Recent findings from an NIH funded R21 randomized control trial (RCT) testing a brief computer-based version of the Cuídalos program indicated that the program increased parent-adolescent general communication and sexual risk communication with English and Spanish speaking U.S. Latinos. Further, despite limited or no previous computer use, parents reported they liked and learned from the program, and that it was easy to use and accessible.

Full description

In this proposed RCT, and based on recommendations from parents who participated in the initial Cuídalos7 intervention trial, the investigators plan to modify the program by: 1) increasing the amount of content related to sexual communication (e.g., more case studies and interactive activities); 2) adding a module on stigma (towards HIV/AIDS); 3) increasing access by moving from a computer-based to a web-based platform; and 4) increasing the flexibility in how the program is used (e.g., ability to view the entire program or specific modules more than once). In order to examine the efficacy of the program, the investigators will recruit 680 parents and one of the participant's adolescents from schools, community-based and governmental organizations in Puerto Rico, and will randomly assign parents to receive: 1) the Cuídalos intervention; or 2) a web-based health promotion control intervention focused on the prevention of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Parents and adolescents will complete measures at pre-intervention and at 3- (parents only), 6-, and 12 month follow-ups.

The investigators will address the five following specific aims:

  1. Determine whether the Cuídalos intervention increases parents' comfort with, as well as the amount of, general and sexual risk-specific communication with adolescents and whether it decreases stigma (towards HIV/AIDS) at 3-,6-, and 12- month follow-ups as compared to the general health promotion control intervention.
  2. Determine whether the Cuídalos intervention decreases self-reported adolescent intercourse and unprotected intercourse at 6-, and 12- month follow-ups as compared to the general health promotion control intervention.
  3. Identify theory-based variables (e.g., attitudes, subjective norms, perceived behavioral control, and intentions) that mediate the intervention effects of Cuídalos on parents' self-reported comfort with and amount of communication with their adolescents.
  4. Determine whether the effects of the Cuídalos intervention on adolescents sexual behavior and parent adolescent communication are moderated by individual (adolescents: sexual experience, gender, age, stigma; parents: gender, age, computer access and experience, frequency and time engaged in the program), and microsystem (adolescents: parent-adolescent communication) factors.
  5. Examine the cost-effectiveness of the web-based Cuídalos intervention on adolescent sexual behavior.

Results from this study will inform the use and efficacy of a web-based Cuídalos program for Puerto Rican parents. This study is an innovative and timely effort given the existing disparities in sexual health outcomes among Latino youth, the lack of culturally and linguistically effective interventions for Latino parents and adolescents, and the absence of web-based interventions with Latinos. If the program is efficacious, the web-based format will accelerate the translation of this program into public health practice and will be an important contribution in supporting adolescent sexual health behaviors.

Enrollment

660 patients

Sex

All

Ages

13 to 17 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  • one parent and one son or daughter between 13 and 17 years of age must agree to be in the study
  • in Puerto Rico

Exclusion Criteria:

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

660 participants in 2 patient groups

Parental communication intervention
Experimental group
Description:
The parental experimental intervention consists of a 60-minute web-based intervention consisting of several modules.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Parental Communication intervention
Health promotion control condition.
Active Comparator group
Description:
The Health promotion control condition will be web-based and provide useful information for Puerto Rican parents and youth.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Health promotion control condition

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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