The Development of a Brief Parent-Child Substance Use Educational Intervention for Black Families

NCT ID: NCT05455203

Last Updated: 2025-04-25

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

SUSPENDED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

40 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2026-01-31

Study Completion Date

2026-11-30

Brief Summary

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The purpose of this study is to adapt a racial-specific parent-child substance use education intervention for Black families in Paterson and East Orange, New Jersey which can promote family bonding, communication, and supervision, as well as acknowledging racial and ethnic specific norms, values, and pride. The adaptation of this intervention will be designed based on the needs of Black parents and their children and direct input from them as stakeholders.

Detailed Description

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The study is a formative qualitative study design with the intention of using findings for the adaptation and evidence-based intervention.

Study Approach: Using the ADAPT-ITT approach, we seek to first consult with Black families and stakeholders in cities that include a large population of Black people in Paterson and East Orange, New Jersey such as to understand their unique challenges in discussing substance use with their children while also seeking their guidance on the development of a racial specific substance use parent-child intervention. The investigator will use a proactive rather than a reactive approach to recruit study participants. A proactive approach brings project staff into direct contact with potential participants. This typically involves face-to-face contact with community leaders and organizations, as well as recruitment presentations and meetings in the community.

Aim 1: Collect qualitative data from Black parents and youth between the ages of 10-17 years from (n=20) parent-child dyads on the challenges, barriers, and facilitators to communicating about substance use. Recruitment will take place with partnership of community-based organizations and supportive family programs. Semi-structured interviews will be conducted with adolescents and their parents to solicit their perspectives on identifiable strategies that have worked to discuss substance use within their family, barriers and facilitators to effective prevention programs, and specific community and cultural norms regarding youth substance use. Interviews will be conducted separately where youth will be included in one focus group and interview and parents will be in a separate focus group and interview. This is done to allow for youth and parents to feel comfortable in sharing challenges pertaining to substance use prevention education.

Aim 2: Adapt a family and community-based substance use prevention intervention for Black youth and families in Paterson and East Orange, NJ. Using the ADAPT-ITT implementation framework, Phase 1 and 2 which include a family and community advisory board (consisting of three parent-child dyads and 3 community leaders) will be developed to guide the adaptation of the intervention. The proposed adapted intervention will build upon evidence-based parent-adolescent interventions such as the Strong African American Families-Teen (SAAF-T) and The Family Check Up.

Aim 2a: Phase 3 of ADAPT-ITT includes theater testing involving the family and community advisory board which will be responsible in reviewing the adapted interventions and providing feedback.

Conditions

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Substance Use

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Black parents and youth between the ages of 11-17 years from (n=40) parent-child dyads will be recruited for this study. The study is a formative qualitative study design with the intention of using findings for the adaptation and evidence-based intervention.
Primary Study Purpose

PREVENTION

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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ADAPT-ITT guided implementation and adaptation

ADAPT-ITT is an implementation science framework that guides the adaptation of evidence-based interventions (EBI) for specific settings or populations. ADAPT-ITT will be used to adapt the target interventions in partnership with a Family and Community Advisory Board, consisting of parents, caregivers, and leaders of family-based organizations in New Jersey.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

ADAPT-ITT

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

ADAPT-ITT is an implementation framework that guides adaptation of evidence-based interventions (EBI) for specific settings/populations. It will be used to adapt target interventions with a Family and Community Advisory Board. It has 8 phases: (1) Assess the risk profile of Black families in Paterson and East Orange, (2) Adopt or adapt an EBI, (3) Administer novel methods with families and children to facilitate the adaptation process, (4) Plan on what aspects of the EBI need to be adapted/how best to evaluate the adapted EBI, (5) Identify additional experts to assist in the adaptation process, (6) Integrate material from experts to adapt the EBI, (7) Train staff to implement the adapted intervention, and (8) Test the adapted intervention. Given time and financial constraints, five phases will be completed at the end of the pilot study. Qualitative data collected from individual dyad interviews will be used to inform the data.

Interventions

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ADAPT-ITT

ADAPT-ITT is an implementation framework that guides adaptation of evidence-based interventions (EBI) for specific settings/populations. It will be used to adapt target interventions with a Family and Community Advisory Board. It has 8 phases: (1) Assess the risk profile of Black families in Paterson and East Orange, (2) Adopt or adapt an EBI, (3) Administer novel methods with families and children to facilitate the adaptation process, (4) Plan on what aspects of the EBI need to be adapted/how best to evaluate the adapted EBI, (5) Identify additional experts to assist in the adaptation process, (6) Integrate material from experts to adapt the EBI, (7) Train staff to implement the adapted intervention, and (8) Test the adapted intervention. Given time and financial constraints, five phases will be completed at the end of the pilot study. Qualitative data collected from individual dyad interviews will be used to inform the data.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Identify as a Black/African American
* Children aged between 11-17
* Assent to being a part of the study
* Live in Paterson, New Jersey at the time of the study or Live in East Orange, NJ
* English as their first language.

Exclusion Criteria

* Do not identify as Black/African American
* Do not assent to being a part of the study
* Does not live in Paterson, New Jersey or East Orange at the time of the study
* Does not read, speak or write in English
Minimum Eligible Age

11 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

17 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)

NIH

Sponsor Role collaborator

Yale University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Ijeoma Opara, PhD LMSW MPH

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Yale University

Locations

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Oasis

Paterson, New Jersey, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Other Identifiers

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R24DA051946

Identifier Type: NIH

Identifier Source: secondary_id

View Link

2000032674

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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