Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, Brown University School of Public Health, United States of America; Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Alpert Medical School of Brown University, United States of America..
Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, Brown University School of Public Health, United States of America.
J Subst Abuse Treat. 2021 Aug;127:108457. doi: 10.1016/j.jsat.2021.108457. Epub 2021 Apr 30.
Adolescents in residential level of care for substance-related problems have high risk of relapse following discharge. Parent engagement lowers relapse risk, but there are myriad barriers to engaging parents in residential treatment and continuing care. Parent SMART (Substance Misuse in Adolescents in Residential Treatment) is a technology-assisted parenting intervention that was designed to circumvent barriers associated with traditional, office-based continuing care interventions to better engage parents. This pilot randomized trial assessed the acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary effectiveness of Parent SMART as an adjunctive intervention to adolescent residential treatment-as-usual (TAU). Sixty-one parent-adolescent dyads were randomized to Parent SMART+TAU or TAU-only. Thirty-seven dyads were recruited from a short-term facility and 24 dyads were recruited from a long-term facility. Those randomized to Parent SMART received a multi-component technology-assisted intervention combining an off-the-shelf online parenting program, coaching sessions, and a parent networking forum. Parent and adolescent assessments were conducted at baseline, 6, 12, and 24-weeks post-discharge. Feasibility (e.g., parental effectiveness) and acceptability (e.g., parental satisfaction, willingness to recommend the intervention) benchmarks were specified a priori as the primary hypotheses. Secondary effectiveness indicators were the proportion of days adolescent used alcohol, cannabis, and any substance. All acceptability and feasibility benchmarks were met or exceeded among dyads in both short- and long-term residential. Generalized linear mixed models showed no significant effects pooled across sites. Analyses by facility revealed two significant time by condition interactions. Adolescents in short-term residential whose parents received Parent SMART showed fewer drinking days and fewer school problems over time, relative to adolescents whose parents received TAU. Results indicate that Parent SMART was both acceptable and feasible, with preliminary indication of effectiveness among those in short-term residential. A fully-powered trial is warranted to reliably test the effectiveness of Parent SMART and understand possible mechanisms of improvement.
接受物质相关问题住院治疗的青少年在出院后复发的风险很高。让家长参与进来可以降低复发风险,但让家长参与住院治疗和持续护理存在诸多障碍。父母 SMART(青少年住院治疗中的物质滥用)是一种技术辅助的父母干预措施,旨在规避与传统基于办公室的持续护理干预相关的障碍,以更好地让父母参与进来。这项试点随机试验评估了父母 SMART 作为青少年住院治疗常规治疗(TAU)辅助干预措施的可接受性、可行性和初步效果。61 对父母-青少年被随机分配到父母 SMART+TAU 或 TAU 组。37 对被从短期机构招募,24 对被从长期机构招募。随机分配到父母 SMART 的人接受了一项多组件的技术辅助干预措施,该措施结合了现成的在线父母培训计划、辅导课程和父母网络论坛。在出院后 6、12 和 24 周对父母和青少年进行评估。可行性(例如父母效能)和可接受性(例如父母满意度、推荐干预的意愿)基准是预先指定的主要假设。次要有效性指标是青少年使用酒精、大麻和任何物质的天数比例。短期和长期住院的所有可接受性和可行性基准都得到了满足或超过。总体线性混合模型显示,在两个地点的汇总数据中没有显著影响。按机构进行的分析显示了两个显著的时间与条件的相互作用。接受父母 SMART 的短期住院青少年与接受 TAU 的青少年相比,随着时间的推移,饮酒天数和学校问题减少。结果表明,父母 SMART 既可以接受又具有可行性,在短期住院的人群中初步显示出有效性。需要进行一项充分有力的试验来可靠地测试父母 SMART 的有效性,并了解可能的改善机制。