Does Delaying Adolescent Substance Use Lead to Improved Cognitive Function and Reduce Risk for Addiction?
Alcohol Related Disorders, Substance Related Disorders
About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Alcohol Related Disorders focused on measuring Adolescent cognitive development, mental disorders, Mood disorders, Alcohol-Related disorders, Mental disorders diagnosed in childhood, Substance related disorders
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Public or private high school
- Must have a Grade 7 cohort of at least 100 youth (up to 200), providing access to 45-90 high risk students per school Selection of high risk youth: Inclusion criteria for students are that they be enrolled in Grade 7 and that they have provided active assent and passive parental consent to participate in the longitudinal survey and randomised trial phases of this study. Participants who score 1 standard deviation above the school mean on one of four subscales of the Substance Use Risk Profile Scale will be selected to participate in the intervention groups, but all students will be followed on outcomes. There are no other exclusion criteria for participants.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Schools cannot be classified as having a majority of their students coded as special needs students, because these schools are smaller and the intervention protocol would have to be tailored for their particular needs
Sites / Locations
- CHU Sainte-Justine Research Center
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Experimental
Preventure programme
The interventions are conducted using manuals which incorporate psycho-educational, motivational enhancement therapy and cognitive-behavioural (CBT) components, and include real life 'scenarios' shared by local youth in with similar personality profiles. In the first session, participants are guided in a goal-setting exercise, designed to enhance motivation to change behaviour. Psycho-educational strategies are then used to teach participants about the target personality variable and associated problematic coping behaviours like avoidance, interpersonal dependence, aggression, risky behaviours and substance misuse.