Summary

Eligibility
for people ages 11-17 (full criteria)
Healthy Volunteers
healthy people welcome
Location
at San Francisco, California
Dates
study started
study ends around
Principal Investigator
by Jyu-Lin Chen, PhD

Description

Summary

Alone time with healthcare providers is vital for adolescents, as recommended by several professional organizations, as it enhances health service utilization, empowers adolescents to manage their health, and facilitates discussions on sensitive issues. Despite its importance, only 40% of adolescents have private conversations with clinicians during visits. mHealth technology offers a promising solution for effective interventions to promote alone time with providers for adolescents, parents, and healthcare providers. This pilot study aims to evaluate the preliminary efficacy of a technology-based intervention designed to increase alone time with providers during well-adolescent visits (WAVs) and its impact on trustworthiness, parent-adolescent communication, sexual risk communication, parental monitoring, and parental support. After providing consent, participants accessed a study website to complete a baseline survey, interact with four modules, and complete a post-test survey one month after WAVs. Surveys assessed alone time, trustworthiness, parent-adolescent communication, sexual risk communication, parental monitoring, and parental support.

Details

Background: Alone time with healthcare providers is critical for adolescents; several professional organizations recommend it. Alone time with providers promotes better utilization of health services, empowers adolescents to manage their health, and facilitates discussions on sensitive issues. However, only 40% of adolescents have private conversations with clinicians during visits. The advancement mHealth technology provides an excellent opportunity to deliver effective interventions to promote adolescent/provider alone time with adolescents, parents, and providers.

Objective: This pilot study aims to explore 1) the preliminary efficacy of a technology-based intervention designed to increase Alone time with providers during well-adolescent visits (WAVs) and 2) its impact on trustworthiness, parent-adolescent communication, sexual risk communication, parental monitoring, and parental support before and after the intervention.

Methods: A pre and post test design is utilized. After obtaining consent, participants accessed a study website to complete a baseline survey, interact with four modules, and complete a post-test survey one month after WAVs. Participants completed surveys assessing alone time, trustworthiness, parent-adolescent communication, sexual risk communication, parental monitoring, and parental support. Mixed model analysis and effect sizes for pre- and post-intervention outcomes were employed.

Keywords

mHealth Intervention, mHealth, adolescent, sexual health, alone time, well child visit, TRUST

Eligibility

You can join if…

Open to people ages 11-17

  • The child is between 11 and 17 years old
  • The child can read and speak English
  • The child has access to the internet (via phone or computer)
  • The child has a well-child visit scheduled in the next 6 months.
  • Mother could be included if they had an adolescent enrolled in this study
  • Mother who speaks and reads English, Cantonese, Mandarin, or Spanish
  • Mother has access to the internet.

You CAN'T join if...

  • Not have a well-child visit scheduled in the next 6 months.

Location

  • Department of Family Health care Nursing
    San Francisco California 94143 United States

Lead Scientist at UCSF

Details

Status
accepting new patients by invitation only
Start Date
Completion Date
(estimated)
Sponsor
University of California, San Francisco
Links
TRUST Study
ID
NCT07064070
Study Type
Interventional
Participants
Expecting 60 study participants
Last Updated