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A Real-time, Contextual Intervention Using Mobile Technology to Reduce Marijuana Use in Youth

A Real-time, Contextual Intervention Using PDAs to Reduce Marijuana Use in Youth

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01762696
Acronym
MOMENT
Enrollment
70
Registered
2013-01-08
Start date
2013-05-31
Completion date
2016-05-31
Last updated
2016-12-12

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Marijuana Abuse

Keywords

marijuana, intervention, adolescent, young adult, primary care, mobile

Brief summary

The purpose of this study is to further develop and test the Momentary Self-Monitoring and Feedback + Motivational Enhancement Therapy (MOMENT) intervention, a real-time, contextual intervention to reduce marijuana use among primary care patients.

Detailed description

This study proposes a pilot randomized trial to further develop and test the Momentary Self-Monitoring and Feedback + Motivational Enhancement Therapy (MOMENT) intervention, a real-time, contextual intervention to reduce marijuana use over three months in 15-to-24-year-old primary care patients who use frequently. We will randomize youth to one of two arms (goal 30 per arm completing 3-month follow-up): 1) MOMENT (MET + momentary self-monitoring + context-dependent feedback), or 2) MET-only. The two study arms will permit evaluation of the contributions of the self-monitoring and feedback components of the intervention above-and-beyond the MET and directly test the influence of the intervention on the link between momentary context and marijuana-related outcomes. The specific aims of the study are Specific Aim 1: Continued Feasibility Evaluation. In our preliminary work, we demonstrated that 1) youth perceive MOMENT to be easy to understand, comfortable, motivating, and helpful in reducing their marijuana use, 2) we can recruit 4 participants/month (minimum rate for the proposed study), and 3) we can successfully implement a MOMENT intervention study in the proposed recruitment sites. Based on this work, we have identified additional areas of feasibility on which to focus in the proposed study. Specifically, we aim to achieve: 1a. A signal response rate of at least 70% during each of three periods of momentary data collection - baseline, intervention, and 3-month follow-up. 1b. A diary response rate of at least 70% during each momentary data collection period 1. c. A retention rate of at least 80% of participants at the 3-month follow-up. Specific Aim 2. Early-Stage Efficacy Exploration. Our preliminary work showed that both momentary and individual-level outcomes improved from baseline to three months post-intervention. The primary momentary outcomes are desire to use marijuana when in a triggering context and likelihood of use following exposure to a triggering context. The primary individual-level outcomes are number of use events/week, 30-day percent of days abstinent, dose/use event, and measures of motivation (importance of, readiness for, and confidence about reducing use). Based on the preliminary findings, we will explore these early-stage efficacy questions: 2. a. Will improvements in momentary outcomes be observed with MOMENT, but not MET-only? (1) The association between exposure to self-identified trigger contexts and momentary desire to use marijuana will be attenuated at three months, compared to pre-intervention. (2) The likelihood of marijuana use following exposure to a trigger context will be reduced at three months. 2b. Will improvements in individual-level outcomes be greater with MOMENT vs. MET-only? 1. The reduction in marijuana use frequency (events/week and 30-day percent of days abstinent) and dose (per use event) will be greater at three months. 2. The increase in motivation to reduce or discontinue use will be greater at three months.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALMET

Motivational Enhancement Therapy only

BEHAVIORALMOMENT

The full MOMENT intervention: Motivational Enhancement Therapy + momentary and daily mobile self-monitoring + motivational feedback messages prompting participants to consider their individualized coping strategies to avoid using marijuana

Sponsors

Boston Children's Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Investigator)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
15 Years to 24 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Male or female between the ages of 15-24 years * Patient of the Boston Children's Hospital Adolescent/Young Adult Medicine Clinic or Martha Elliot Health Center Adolescent Clinic * Ability to read and understand English

Exclusion criteria

* Medically or emotionally unstable, intoxicated or high,, or otherwise unable to give consent at the time of their appointment * Have previously participated in this study * Does not meet the above inclusion criteria

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Marijuana desire3 monthsDesire to use marijuana when in top-3 trigger context
Marijuana use following trigger exposure3 monthsMarijuana use following exposure to top-3 trigger context
Frequency of marijuana use3 monthsMarijuana use events/day
Percent days abstinent3 months30-day percent days abstinent from marijuana use
Motivation to reduce marijuana use3 monthsDaily score on 3 scales - readiness to reduce marijuana use, importance of reducing use, and confidence in ability to reduce use

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026