Family and Adolescent Motivational Incentives for Leveraging Youth
NCT ID: NCT01736995
Last Updated: 2018-05-02
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
212 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2012-07-31
2018-04-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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The study addresses the question of whether adding a Contingency Management (CM) approach, in which adolescents are provided with a monetary incentive for providing clean urine, enhances the efficacy of two research-proven interventions for adolescent substance use. Specifically, the investigators compare if Functional Family Therapy (FFT) and Motivational Enhancement/Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (MET/CBT) combined with CM are better than either intervention alone. The investigators also explore the extent to which the addition of CM increases the speed with which adolescents achieve abstinence as well as the durability of these effects over time. The inclusion of two distinct forms of therapy also permits the investigation of how the interventions achieve their effects on adolescent drug use (e.g., improvements in family functioning in FFT vs. improvements in drug avoidance and self-efficacy skills in MET/CBT).
Specific Aim 1: To evaluate the efficacy of CM versus nonCM conditions delivered in the context of either group (MET/CBT) or family (FFT) treatments for substance abusing adolescents. The investigators will use two substance use dependent variables. The first variable assesses the presence or absence of illegal substances in urine samples collected weekly beginning at baseline and continuing during the 12-14 weeks of scheduled treatment. Urine samples will be collected at all post-randomization assessments. Although most of the adolescents are polydrug users, marijuana is the primary drug of abuse. The investigators anticipate that once weekly urine screens will be able to detect recent marijuana use. The Time Line Follow-back (TLFB) will be used to provide weekly estimates of drug use abstinence for a period from 3 months before to 12 months after randomization. Specifically, the investigators predict that the CM versus the nonCM conditions will produce a significant main effect increase in the number of weeks of drug use abstinence during the treatment phase (i.e., months 1-4; Hypothesis 1a) and during the post treatment period (i.e., 4-12 months; Hypothesis 1b).
Specific Aim 2: To evaluate the efficacy of CM versus nonCM on secondary behavioral outcomes. Specifically, The investigators predict that CM versus the nonCM conditions will be associated with significantly lower levels of sexually risky behaviors (Hypothesis 2a) and conduct problems (Hypothesis 2b) over time.
Specific Aim 3: To evaluate the effects of CM on hypothesized mediators of the MET/CBT and the FFT intervention effects. The investigators anticipate that the CM conditions are more likely than the nonCM conditions to accelerate the adolescent's motivation (1) to achieve abstinence, (2) to attend and participate in treatment, (3) to complete homework assignments. The SOCRATES scale will assess their motivation to achieve abstinence. Specifically, the investigators predict that youth receiving the CM versus nonCM will show higher rates of motivation for change at the 2-month assessment (Hypothesis 3a) and higher rates of treatment attendance and homework compliance (as measured by weekly therapist reports) over the course of treatment (Hypothesis 3b).
Exploratory Aims: The investigators will conduct exploratory analyses to examine if the number of continuous weeks of abstinence during treatment, adolescent's motivation to achieve abstinence, attendance, and homework compliance will mediate abstinence following treatment. Additional analyses will examine differences between modalities (MET/CBT vs FFT) on the presumed mediators: MET/CBT will produce greater improvements in adolescent's drug avoidance self-efficacy and FFT will produce greater improvements in family relationships (as measured by the FES). Improvements in drug avoidance self-efficacy and family relationships will mediate improvements in MET/CBT and FFT, respectively. The investigators will also explore potential differences within modality to determine if adding CM enhances the effects of each modalities impact on the presumed mediators of outcome. The results of these analyses will help determine if there is sufficient merit to warrant additional research into mechanisms of action within each modality. Finally, the investigators will conduct an informal cost-effectiveness analysis to derive preliminary estimates of the relative costs of each treatment modality, particularly with respect to treatment engagement/attendance and youth outplacement to restricted settings.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Motivational/Cog Beh Tx-Contingency Mgmt
The group Motivational Enhancement Tx/Cognitive Behavioral Tx (MET/CBT) treatment is a peer-focused, multi-component intervention involving 2 initial individual motivational sessions followed by 12 group sessions that includes a functional analysis of behavior to identify antecedents and consequences of drug use and skills training for coping with cravings, enhancing assertive communication, drug refusal, managing negative moods, problem-solving, decision-making, and relapse prevention. The additional inclusion of contingency management (CM) methods will provide immediate, tangible reinforcers as a consequence delivered contingently upon evidence of abstinence from substance use or other desirable behavior.
Contingency Management
Functional Family Tx- Contingency Mgmt
Functional Family Therapy (FFT) is a brief treatment for youth with problem behaviors, including substance abuse that consists of 12 to 14 weekly family sessions. The FFT treatment is applied in five distinct phases: Engagement, Motivation, Relational Assessment, Behavior Change, and Generalization and each phase has specific goals, techniques, and therapist skills. The additional inclusion of contingency management (CM) methods will provide immediate, tangible reinforcers to the family as a consequence delivered contingently upon evidence of abstinence from substance use or other desirable behavior.
Functional Family Therapy
Contingency Management
Motivational/Cog Beh Tx
The group Motivational Enhancement Tx/Cognitive Behavioral Tx (MET/CBT) treatment is a peer-focused, multi-component intervention involving 2 initial individual motivational sessions followed by 12 group sessions that includes a functional analysis of behavior to identify antecedents and consequences of drug use and skills training for coping with cravings, enhancing assertive communication, drug refusal, managing negative moods, problem-solving, decision-making, and relapse prevention.
Motivational Enhancement Tx/Cognitive Behavioral Tx
Functional Family Tx
Functional Family Therapy (FFT) is a brief treatment for youth with problem behaviors, including substance abuse that consists of 12 to 14 weekly family sessions. The FFT treatment is applied in five distinct phases: Engagement, Motivation, Relational Assessment, Behavior Change, and Generalization and each phase has specific goals, techniques, and therapist skills.
Functional Family Therapy
Interventions
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Functional Family Therapy
Motivational Enhancement Tx/Cognitive Behavioral Tx
Contingency Management
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Meets DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for substance abuse or dependence
* Living at home with the participating parent
* Sufficient residential stability to permit probable contact at follow- up(e.g., not homeless at time of intake)
Exclusion Criteria
* Deemed dangerous to self or others at intake
* Services other than outpatient treatment are required for the youth (e.g., inpatient, detoxification)
* Marijuana use is reported as being less than 13% of the previous 90 days
13 Years
17 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Dartmouth College
OTHER
Oregon Research Institute
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Michael Robbins, Ph.D.
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Oregon Research Institute; Functional Family Therapy, Inc.
Locations
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Oregon Research Institute Center for Family and Adolescent Research
Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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