N/A
N=202
Parental Research on Interventions for Social Media
Underage Drinking
Bottom Line
View on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04333966 ↗Enrolled (actual)
202
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Oct 2024
Primary outcome: Primary: Acceptability (Parent)- Program Usefulness — 42 Participants
Study Design & Population
- Study type
- Interventional
- Phase
- N/A
- Interventions
- Interactive Social Networking Site Parent Based Intervention (Behavioral); Active Control (Behavioral)
- Age
- Pediatric, Adult, Older Adult · 15+ yrs
- Sex
- All
- Sponsor
- University of North Texas Health Science Center
- Primary completion
- Mar 2024
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY Acceptability (Parent)- Program Usefulness |
42 | — |
| PRIMARY Acceptability (Parent)- Relationship |
45 | — |
| PRIMARY Acceptability (Teen)- Relationship |
41 | — |
| PRIMARY Acceptability (Teen)- Percentage Who Would Recommend the Program |
45 | — |
| PRIMARY Acceptability (Parent)- Percentage Who Would Recommend the Program |
45 | — |
| SECONDARY Drinking Days in Past Month (Teen) |
0.18; 0.76 | — |
| SECONDARY Drinking Days in Past Month (Teen) |
0.18; 0.76 | — |
| SECONDARY Communication About Alcohol and Social Media (Parent) |
1.80; 1.66 | — |
| SECONDARY Communication About Alcohol and Social Media (Parent) |
1.80; 1.66 | — |
| SECONDARY Communication About Alcohol and Social Media (Teen) |
1.48; 1.33 | — |
| SECONDARY Communication About Alcohol and Social Media (Teen) |
1.48; 1.33 | — |
Summary
The prevalence of underage alcohol use continues to be a public health concern. Numerous studies have reported associations between teen drinking tendencies and parental attitudes and beliefs, parental awareness of teen drinking, parental monitoring and the quality of the parent-teen relationship and communication. The extensive work in this area has resulted in parent-based intervention (PBI) efforts to prevent or reduce adolescent alcohol use. Several independent studies have indicated that teens whose parents received a PBI reported less alcohol use and fewer alcohol-related consequences. Despite these strengths, one major limitation of PBI is that they do not currently take into account the large role that social networking sites (SNS) use plays in adolescents' lives and in relation to their alcohol use. Most (90%) adolescents are on SNS, and their Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter profiles include alcohol content. Thus, adolescents are making and exposed to SNS alcohol displays and these displays are associated with high-risk drinking cognitions and alcohol use. As such, the investigators propose to develop and refine an interactive PBI designed to reduce high-risk SNS cognitions (i.e. attitudes and norms), alcohol use, and negative consequences among adolescents. To achieve study aims, the investigators propose an iterative process of focus groups in order to develop and refine the interactive PBI to be delivered in the pilot study with 1 and 6-month follow-up among 100 parent/teen dyads. The objective of this R34 application is to establish feasibility and acceptability of the newly developed interactive PBI that focuses on the role of SNS in adolescent alcohol use as well as to determine preliminary effect sizes for future studies. Determining an efficacious way to reduce alcohol use and high-risk alcohol display cognitions affords future research the opportunity to make use of social network-based interventions, thus the proposed research has great potential to serve as a catalyst for future research.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria (Parents):
- have a child between the ages of 15-20 who currently lives with them
- believe that their child is active on at least one SNS
- live in Texas
- valid email address
- own a cell phone with text messaging capabilities and be ok with receiving messages
- provide valid contact information for their teen
- and willing to complete a 6 month long pilot study
Inclusion Criteria (Teens):
- being between the ages of 15-20
- be active on at least one SNS
- live in Texas
- valid email address
- own a cell phone with text messaging capabilities and be ok with receiving messages
- and willing to complete a 6 month long pilot study
Exclusion Criteria
- not meeting inclusion criteria
- unwillingness to participate
- failure to provide consent (e.g., declining participation in the study)
- providing inconsistent responses (e.g., age) identified by the survey and introductory study telephone call
- and having already participated in the study as identified by overlap or consistency in computer IP addresses, contact information, and demographics.
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04333966). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.