CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
N/ACompleted· 662 enrolled
Drug / intervention
Behavioral Interventionother
Likely dose
Not stated in record
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Search/NCT03411577
NCT03411577N/ACompleted

Development and Testing of a Jamaican Mother-daughter HIV Risk-reduction Program

Boston College·interventional·Posted Jan 26, 2018·Updated Jan 26, 2018

In Brief

A clinical study evaluating Behavioral Intervention for Parent-Child Relations and 2 related conditions. Completed, enrolled 662 participants.

Detailed Summary

Caribbean nations, including Jamaica, exhibit HIV rates that are second only to sub-Saharan Africa. Jamaican young women and adolescent girls are at particularly high risk due to a number of cultural factors, gender norms, partnering with older male partners, and lack of knowledge and skills related to sexual refusal and HIV prevention. U.S. studies have shown that mothers may act as a key influence of their daughters' sexual risk beliefs and behaviors. However, no such studies have documented these effects outside of the U.S. and no studies have evaluated HIV risk-reduction interventions with Jamaican adolescent girls and their mothers. Hence, the purpose of this study is to partner with the University of the West Indies, Jamaican community based organizations (CBOs) and families in order to develop and test a culture-specific mother-daughter HIV risk-reduction intervention in a randomized field experiment. Specifically, the investigative team will evaluate whether a culture-specific, theory-based, skill-building intervention with Jamaican adolescent girls and their mothers can directly and/or indirectly reduce these girls' HIV risk-associated sexual behaviors. Jamaican girls, ages 13 - 17, and their mothers/female guardians will be recruited from CBOs and randomly assigned to either: (a) a mother-daughter HIV risk-reduction intervention condition or (b) a "no intervention" waitlist control condition. The HIV risk-reduction intervention includes 12 1-hour modules scheduled over 2 days and implemented by trained adult Jamaican women (nurses and CBO staff). The mother component is designed to increase those parenting behaviors (e.g., monitoring and parent-teen sexual risk communication \[PTSRC\]) associated with reduced adolescent sexual risk-taking; the teen component is designed to improve girls' beliefs and skills related to abstinence, sexual negotiation and condom use. A "waitlist" control condition is being employed as the proposed project is a pilot study of the HIV risk-reduction intervention. Primary outcomes include mothers'/daughters' reports of parenting behaviors (monitoring and PTSRC) and daughters' self-reports of sexual risk behaviors (sexual intercourse, unprotected sex, condom use, number of partners). Secondary outcomes include daughters' STI rates, mothers' beliefs regarding parenting behaviors and daughters beliefs regarding sexual risk behaviors.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
Countries--

Timeline

N/ACompletedFinished
20082009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024202520262027
First PostedJan 26, 2018
Enrollment StartSep 29, 2007
Primary CompletionJul 28, 2011
Study CompletionJun 30, 2012
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 3.8 yearsPosted 8.4 years ago

Interventions

Behavioral Interventionother