Pilot Test of Parent-Focused Cannabis-Related Actions and Practices Intervention for Adolescent Marijuana Abuse (CAP)
Cannabis Use Disorder, Mild, Cannabis Use Disorder, Moderate
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Cannabis Use Disorder, Mild focused on measuring Adolescent, Marijuana Abuse, Prevention, Early Treatment
Eligibility Criteria
Parent Inclusion Criteria:
- Has a valid New Mexico medical marijuana card
- A biological or adoptive parent, step-parent or other parent figure who serves as the primary caregiver of a 13- to 17-year-old adolescent
- Parents and youth live together at least 40% of the time (i.e., minimum of 3 days per week)
- Reside in the greater Albuquerque, New Mexico area
- Has sufficient residential stability to permit probable contact at follow-up (e.g., not homeless at time of intake)
- Has sufficient English language skills to participate in the interventions and complete assessments
Adolescent inclusion criteria:
- Reports marijuana use on at least one occasion
- Has sufficient English language skills to complete assessments
Parent exclusion Criteria:
- Parent appears to have insufficient cognitive functioning to understand consent process, assessments and interventions
- Currently in drug treatment for a cannabis or other substance use disorder, whether medical or non-medical, and (3) a spouse or parenting partner is already enrolled in the study.
Adolescent exclusion criteria:
- Has a valid New Mexico medical marijuana card
- Reports weekly use of an illicit drug (i.e., excluding alcohol, tobacco, or marijuana)
- Appears to have insufficient cognitive functioning to understand assent process and assessments
- A sibling is already participating in the study
Sites / Locations
- Center for Family and Adolescent Research
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
CAP Intervention
Wait List
CAP is a parent-focused intervention being developed to help parents in states with legalized medical marijuana to address adolescent marijuana use. The proposed intervention will address the effects of marijuana on adolescent behavioral health, brain development, and social functioning and enhance parent motivation to use CAP concepts. Guided by formative research, CAP will build skills and provide strategies to: (1) restrict adolescent exposure to cannabis products and parent cannabis use in the home, (2) improve parent communication about their own cannabis use and expectations about youth marijuana use, (3) improve monitoring, (4) increase positive reinforcement for youth abstinence, and (5) address parent negative emotions. Parents will meet in groups with an interventionist for two 75-minute sessions. Presentations, discussion, and roleplay will be used to help parents gain mastery of preventive parenting behaviors and related strategies to reduce adolescent marijuana use.
Parents randomly assigned to Wait List Delayed CAP (WL) will receive no intervention for the baseline to 3-month follow-up period. Thus, the WL condition will serve as a comparison group from baseline to the 3-month assessment point. After the 3-month follow-up assessment, WL parents will be offered the CAP intervention. The final assessment for the WL participants will function as a 3-month follow-up assessment, allowing us to aggregate data all 60 parent-adolescent dyads to conduct within group analyses of pre- to post-intervention change on key variables of interest.