Enhancing Quality Interventions Promoting Healthy Sexuality
NCT ID: NCT01818791
Last Updated: 2019-03-27
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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UNKNOWN
NA
960 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2012-07-31
2019-05-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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The capacity building intervention for program staff called Getting To Outcomes (GTO) provides techincal assistance, training, and a manual to improve community-based practitioners' capacity to complete tasks associated with implementing an EBP, which in turn leads to improved implementation fidelity. Improved implementation fidelity of EBPs like Making Proud Choices leads to improved teen sexual health outcomes. In quasi-experimental and case studies, GTO has been shown effective in helping community-based organizations implement substance abuse prevention EBPs with fidelity and document outcomes. GTO was later adapted by CDC in its 5-year Promoting Science Based Approaches to Teen Pregnancy Prevention Project (PSBA-GTO). However, CDC did not evaluate GTO's impact on program fidelity or teen sexual health outcomes. The proposed randomized, controlled trial would build on the tools developed in PSBA-GTO and other GTO projects to compare staff capacity, program fidelity, and teen sexual health outcomes across 16 Boys and Girls Clubs implementing MPC in the fashion typical of community settings (8 in Atlanta, 8 in Alabama) with 16 Boys and Girls Clubs implementing MPC augmented with GTO (also 8 in Atlanta, 8 in Alabama). The specific aims of this investigator-initiated R01 are to:
1. Assess the (a) utilization of and (b) subsequent effects of GTO on program staff capacity to implement EBPs
2. Assess the degree to which Boys and Girls Clubs using GTO show greater improvements in MPC fidelity than Boys and Girls Clubs that are not using GTO
3. Assess the degree to which middle-school-aged youth enrolled in the Boys and Girls Clubs using GTO show greater improvements in sexual health outcomes than Boys and Girls Clubs that are not using GTO
This study has the potential to document, for the first time, how a capacity-building intervention (GTO) can help community-based organizations implement EBPs and improve teen sexual health outcomes. This information is critical as states and particularly the federal government are allocating substantial funds to implement EBPs to prevent teen pregnancy in community-based settings (e.g., in FY 2010 the Administration for Children and Families Office of Adolescent Health dedicated $110 million). As such, the proposed study will inform the ongoing debate about how to best improve the implementation of EBPs to achieve better teen sexual health outcomes and educate policymakers' about the resources needed for successful implementation of EBPs on a large scale.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
PREVENTION
NONE
Study Groups
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Making Proud Choices alone
These sites will be trained in Making Proud Choices.
Making Proud Choices
Making Proud Choices (MPC) is a well-established pregnancy and HIV/STI risk-reduction EBP with multiple trials demonstrating its effectiveness. Using Social Cognitive Theory, the Theories of Reasoned Action, and Planned Behavior, MPC aims to influence adolescents' knowledge and beliefs about risk, efficacy, and control to change behavior. MPC stresses the role of sexual responsibility, community, and pride in making safer sexual choices. The program promotes abstinence first, but also provides information and skills needed for safer-sex decision-making and practices (e.g., condom use).
Making Proud Choices+Getting To Outcomes
These sites will receive training in Making Proud Choices and receive the Getting To Outcomes intervention.
Making Proud Choices
Making Proud Choices (MPC) is a well-established pregnancy and HIV/STI risk-reduction EBP with multiple trials demonstrating its effectiveness. Using Social Cognitive Theory, the Theories of Reasoned Action, and Planned Behavior, MPC aims to influence adolescents' knowledge and beliefs about risk, efficacy, and control to change behavior. MPC stresses the role of sexual responsibility, community, and pride in making safer sexual choices. The program promotes abstinence first, but also provides information and skills needed for safer-sex decision-making and practices (e.g., condom use).
Making Proud Choices AND Getting To Outcomes
In addition to MPC, these sites receive the Getting To Outcomes(GTO) intervention, which builds capacity for EBPs by strengthening the knowledge, attitudes, and skills needed to choose, plan, implement, evaluate, and sustain those EBPs. GTO poses ten "steps" that must be addressed and provides practitioners with the guidance necessary to address those steps with quality-i.e., as close to the ideal as possible. Implementation of these ten steps is facilitated by three types of assistance: the GTO manual of text and tools originally published by the RAND Corporation and then applied to teen pregnancy (PSBA-GTO), face-to-face training, and onsite TA. Consistent with social cognitive theories of behavioral change exposure to GTO training and TA leads to more knowledge about performing GTO-related activities, which leads to more positive attitudes towards these activities, which in turn leads to the execution of more GTO-related behaviors.
Interventions
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Making Proud Choices
Making Proud Choices (MPC) is a well-established pregnancy and HIV/STI risk-reduction EBP with multiple trials demonstrating its effectiveness. Using Social Cognitive Theory, the Theories of Reasoned Action, and Planned Behavior, MPC aims to influence adolescents' knowledge and beliefs about risk, efficacy, and control to change behavior. MPC stresses the role of sexual responsibility, community, and pride in making safer sexual choices. The program promotes abstinence first, but also provides information and skills needed for safer-sex decision-making and practices (e.g., condom use).
Making Proud Choices AND Getting To Outcomes
In addition to MPC, these sites receive the Getting To Outcomes(GTO) intervention, which builds capacity for EBPs by strengthening the knowledge, attitudes, and skills needed to choose, plan, implement, evaluate, and sustain those EBPs. GTO poses ten "steps" that must be addressed and provides practitioners with the guidance necessary to address those steps with quality-i.e., as close to the ideal as possible. Implementation of these ten steps is facilitated by three types of assistance: the GTO manual of text and tools originally published by the RAND Corporation and then applied to teen pregnancy (PSBA-GTO), face-to-face training, and onsite TA. Consistent with social cognitive theories of behavioral change exposure to GTO training and TA leads to more knowledge about performing GTO-related activities, which leads to more positive attitudes towards these activities, which in turn leads to the execution of more GTO-related behaviors.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
10 Years
14 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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RAND
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Matthew Chinman, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
RAND
Locations
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Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Lee County
Auburn, Alabama, United States
Boys & Girls Clubs of North Alabama
Huntsville, Alabama, United States
Boys & Girls Clubs of Montgomery
Montgomery, Alabama, United States
Atlanta Boys and Girls Club
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Countries
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References
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Chinman M, Acosta J, Ebener P, Driver J, Keith J, Peebles D. Enhancing Quality Interventions Promoting Healthy Sexuality (EQUIPS): a novel application of translational research methods. Clin Transl Sci. 2013 Jun;6(3):232-7. doi: 10.1111/cts.12031. Epub 2013 Apr 18.
Chinman M, Acosta J, Ebener P, Malone PS, Slaughter ME. A Cluster-Randomized Trial of Getting To Outcomes' Impact on Sexual Health Outcomes in Community-Based Settings. Prev Sci. 2018 May;19(4):437-448. doi: 10.1007/s11121-017-0845-6.
Chinman M, Acosta J, Ebener P, Malone PS, Slaughter ME. Can implementation support help community-based settings better deliver evidence-based sexual health promotion programs? A randomized trial of Getting To Outcomes(R). Implement Sci. 2016 May 31;11(1):78. doi: 10.1186/s13012-016-0446-y.
Herman PM, Chinman M, Ebener P, Malone PS, Acosta J. Cost analysis of a randomized trial of Getting to Outcomes implementation support for a teen pregnancy prevention program offered in Boys and Girls Clubs in Alabama and Georgia. Prev Sci. 2020 Nov;21(8):1114-1125. doi: 10.1007/s11121-020-01162-y.
Other Identifiers
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