Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Center for Dissemination and Implementation Science, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, USA.
Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, USA.
Addict Sci Clin Pract. 2024 Oct 18;19(1):75. doi: 10.1186/s13722-024-00509-y.
It is well established that an adolescent's neighborhood is associated with their likelihood of developing a substance use disorder. The availability of drugs, lack of access to resources, and exposure to violence are all associated with greater substance use among young people, leading to more pronounced health inequities. Technology assisted interventions (TAIs) have been touted to enhance the reach of substance use treatment and improve outcomes for high-need families living in underserved neighborhoods. A key question is whether neighborhood characteristics impact the effectiveness of TAIs, given these interventions are embedded within an adolescent's natural environment. This National Institute on Drug Abuse-funded Diversity Supplement will examine the role of perceived neighborhood characteristics on response to Parent SMART, a TAI for parents of adolescents in residential substance use treatment (R37DA052918; PI: Becker). Aim 1 will use both adolescent and parent self-report of multiple neighborhood dimensions (e.g., physical environment, social disorder, satisfaction with community resources) to identify indicators predictive of treatment response. Aim 2 will then explore the indirect relationship between neighborhood context and response to Parent SMART, via engagement.
Participants include adolescent and parent dyads enrolled in an effectiveness trial evaluating Parent SMART, a TAI for parents of adolescents in residential substance youth treatment. Participants will complete self-report measures of neighborhood physical environment, social disorder, and satisfaction with community resources at baseline to predict parenting and youth substance outcomes at 6-, 12-, and 24-weeks post discharge.
To date, few studies have explicitly tested how neighborhood affects response to TAIs for adolescent substance use. Assessing adolescent and parent perceptions of neighborhood characteristics holds potential to pinpoint key contextual factors that affect TAI response and to promote consideration of multi-level health equity determinants in substance use research. Understanding neighborhood influences can advance public health by helping tailor TAIs to address the unique needs of adolescents living in underserved communities.
This study extends the measurement and analysis plan of a pragmatic effectiveness trial. The pragmatic effectiveness trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05169385; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05169385.
众所周知,青少年所处的社区与其发展物质使用障碍的可能性有关。毒品的可获得性、资源获取的不足以及暴露于暴力之中,所有这些都与年轻人更多地使用物质有关,从而导致更明显的健康不平等。技术辅助干预(TAI)已被吹捧为扩大物质使用治疗的覆盖面,并改善居住在服务不足社区的高需求家庭的治疗效果。一个关键问题是,鉴于这些干预措施嵌入在青少年的自然环境中,社区特征是否会影响 TAI 的有效性。这项由国家药物滥用研究所资助的多样性补充研究将检查感知社区特征在对父母 SMART 治疗的反应中的作用,父母 SMART 是一种针对居住在物质使用治疗中的青少年父母的 TAI(R37DA052918;PI:Becker)。目的 1 将使用青少年和父母对多个社区维度的自我报告(例如,物理环境、社会混乱、对社区资源的满意度)来确定预测治疗反应的指标。目的 2 将进一步探索通过参与度,社区环境与对父母 SMART 治疗的反应之间的间接关系。
参与者包括参加评估父母 SMART 的有效性试验的青少年和父母对子,父母 SMART 是一种针对居住在物质青少年治疗中的青少年父母的 TAI。参与者将在基线时完成对社区物理环境、社会混乱和对社区资源满意度的自我报告测量,以预测 6、12 和 24 周出院后父母养育和青少年物质使用的结果。
迄今为止,很少有研究明确测试社区如何影响青少年物质使用 TAI 的反应。评估青少年和父母对社区特征的看法有可能确定影响 TAI 反应的关键环境因素,并促进在物质使用研究中考虑多层次的健康公平决定因素。了解社区的影响可以通过帮助定制 TAI 以满足居住在服务不足社区的青少年的独特需求来促进公共健康。
本研究扩展了实用有效性试验的测量和分析计划。实用有效性试验在 ClinicalTrials.gov 注册,NCT05169385;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05169385。