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Parenting Stress mHealth

Parenting Stress mHealth

Recruiting
12 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Parenting stress is a well-documented barrier to youth engagement in community-based substance use treatment. The current project aims to develop and evaluate a mobile health parenting stress intervention for caregivers of justice-involved youth, a population with high rates of substance use and low rates of treatment engagement.

Description

Justice-involved youth exhibit high rates of substance use and mental health symptoms, yet few receive treatment during detention or community re-entry. Once released into the community, caregivers must facilitate youth's treatment engagement, mobilizing significant resources and facing many barriers (e.g., transportation, mistrust) to do so. Parenting stress, which is heightened during youth detention and community reentry, is associated with greater perceived barriers to treatment, less youth therapeutic change throughout treatment, and premature treatment dropout. Addressing parenting stress improves youth treatment engagement and outcomes among youth exhibiting antisocial behavior, yet given the many barriers to treatment, novel approaches to intervention are needed; mobile health (mHealth) technology is one promising approach. Caregivers of justice-involved youth and system stakeholders are interested in mHealth treatment and mHealth addresses instrumental barriers (e.g., transportation) to treatment. Advances in technology and community engaged research allow for active stakeholder collaboration in mHealth application development, with no technological expertise required, through participatory informatics; caregiver involvement increases the likelihood the intervention will be relevant and efficacious. The purpose of this mixed-methods K23 study is to 1) develop a mHealth parenting stress intervention using participatory informatics; 2) assess the feasibility and acceptability of the participatory informatics approach and the intervention; 3) evaluate the intervention's preliminary efficacy in reducing parenting stress and increasing youth engagement in substance use or dual diagnosis treatment post-detention through a pilot randomized controlled trial; and 4) understand systems-level factors that could influence eventual system adoption and sustainability.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

        The following is a description for the inclusion criteria for aims 1 and 2 for caregivers
        participating in this research study.
        Eligible caregivers must be the parent or legal guardian of a youth who is:
          -  currently detained in a juvenile detention center or correctional facility, mandated
             by the juvenile justice system to a congregate out-of-home placement (e.g., group
             home);
          -  12-17 years old;
          -  has an identified substance use or substance use and co-occurring mental health need;
          -  and is scheduled to be released into the community to the care of the enrolled
             caregiver.
        The following is a description for the inclusion criteria for aim 3 for system stakeholders
        participating in this research study.
        Eligible behavioral health providers (e.g., substance use counselor) must:
          -  Provide substance use or dual diagnosis treatment justice-involved youth and their
             caregivers,
          -  be over 18 years old,
          -  and speak English fluently.
        Eligible juvenile probation officers must be:
          -  18 years or older
          -  and speak fluent English.
        Exclusion Criteria:
        Exclusion criteria for all participants includes:
          -  lack of proficiency in English
          -  and cognitive impairment or active psychosis which precludes provision of informed
             consent.
        Caregivers who do not have access to a device with internet access will also not be
        eligible as this would preclude them from being able to participate in the mHealth
        intervention.

Study details
    Stress

NCT05032742

University of California, San Francisco

21 February 2024

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