Alcohol use is prevalent in U.S. adolescents and contributes to adverse health outcomes in this population. Care for adolescent alcohol use is lacking in most pediatric primary care settings (PPC). This project is a pragmatic comparative effectiveness and implementation study that employs a superiority, two-arm, randomized, prospective, observer-blinded, controlled trial design to compare the effectiveness of a patient-centered brief motivational interviewing-based alcohol intervention (BMAI) alone to the same BMAI augmented with adjunctive smartphone app-delivered mindfulness training (MT) for alcohol use in adolescents receiving primary care in PPC clinics across a regional health network. Main effectiveness outcomes will be alcohol use and alcohol related problems assessed over a one-year follow-up period. Implementation outcomes and mediators and moderators of intervention response will also be examined as part of the study.
Alcohol use is prevalent in U.S. adolescents and contributes to adverse health outcomes in this population. Over the past decade, screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) has become the primary model for addressing alcohol problems in US adolescents in pediatric healthcare settings. However, uptake and fidelity of SBIRT vary widely in real world settings and barriers to implementing effective brief interventions are common. Standard brief alcohol interventions (BAIs) have predominantly applied motivational interviewing (MI) and feedback techniques to target alcohol and other drug use in adolescents. There is a need to expand BAI options for youth who do not respond to these standard approaches. One intervention approach with growing societal interest and emerging evidence for efficacy in adolescent alcohol and other drug use is mindfulness training (MT). This project will compare two types of evidenced-based care for alcohol use in adolescents recruited from 13 pediatric primary care clinics in a regional health system. The interventions will be a patient-centered brief motivational interviewing-based alcohol intervention (BMAI) delivered by PPC clinicians as part of routine care, and BMAI in combination with smartphone app-delivered mindfulness training (BMAI+ MT). The project is a pragmatic effectiveness and implementation study that employs a superiority, two-arm, randomized, prospective, observer-blinded, controlled trial design to compare the effectiveness of BMAI alone vs. BMAI augmented with adjunctive smartphone app-delivered MT on alcohol outcomes over a one-year follow-up period. The investigators will use the well-established standard BMAI adapted from the Provider Guide: Adolescent SBIRT Using the Screening to Brief Intervention Car, Relax, Alone, Forget, Friends, Trouble (S2BI-CRAFFT) Screening Tool, an evidence-based brief intervention for alcohol use in youth, and the widely disseminated Healthy Minds Program (HMP) smartphone meditation/mindfulness app which is freely available, science-based, and has shown feasibility and efficacy for reducing stress in youth populations. These interventions which combine elements of face-to-face +/- digital delivery and MI +/- MT will be tested in PPC clinics throughout the Johns Hopkins Medical Institute (JHMI) healthcare network which primarily serves racially/ethnically diverse population of urban and suburban youth in the greater Baltimore/Washington region that has a high proportion of minoritized youth. The project seeks to answer the following three research questions: Comparative effectiveness outcomes: What is the relative effectiveness of face-to-face clinician-administered BMAI with vs. without adjunctive app-delivered MT with the HMP app for alcohol using youth in PPC settings? Does supplementing clinician-administered BMAI with app-delivered MT result in superior outcomes in the form of reduced alcohol use and problems for this population or subgroups of the population? Implementation outcomes: What are the patient and stakeholder perspectives, experiences, and preferences related to delivering BAI with these different components? What are the barriers and facilitators to delivering these BAI in PPC settings and for the diverse patient population served? Heterogeneity of treatment effect (HTE) outcomes: How do baseline factors such as clinical severity, comorbid psychiatric symptoms and conditions, Socio-economic status (SES), sex, race, ethnicity, caregiver involvement, treatment preference, organization and clinical site readiness, and level of SBIRT integration at PPC clinic sites moderate outcomes across comparator interventions? How do changes in factors that may be mechanism of behavioral change (MOBC) for the different interventions (e.g. 'intrinsic' motivation to quit/reduce drinking, self-efficacy, and goal commitment for MI and mindfulness, anxiety, depression, impulsivity, and self-regulation for MT) and degree of engagement with intervention components (e.g., no. of sessions attended, time spent and no. of MT exercises completed, application of mindfulness in real-life settings) mediate outcomes across comparator interventions? Which patient subgroups benefit the most from which specific mindfulness and motivational BAI components?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
1,500
Participants in both arms (BMAI and BMAI + MT) will receive a brief motivational interviewing-based alcohol intervention (BMAI) delivered by a pediatric clinician in the primary care setting. BMAI is adapted from the Provider Guide: Adolescent SBIRT Using the S2BI-CRAFFT Screening Tool, grounded in the stages of change model and motivational interviewing (MI). It consists of one or more brief sessions involving structured feedback, advice, and goal setting to help adolescents recognize links between substance use and health outcomes and develop personalized change plans. The intervention is face-to-face, delivered during routine or follow-up visits, and modeled after the brief negotiated interview. The first session lasts 10-30 minutes and includes six MI-based steps. This is followed by one or more additional brief MI sessions lasting 5-15 minutes where the patient's goals are reviewed, gains or barriers are addressed, and ongoing support is provided.
In addition to BMAI, participants in the BMAI + MT arm will receive 8 weeks of smartphone-delivered mindfulness training using the Healthy Minds Program (HMP) app. The HMP app provides self-guided, self-paced mindfulness and meditation training designed to improve psychological well-being, reduce stress/anxiety, and enhance self-regulation. It includes podcast-style teachings and guided meditations. The app features four modules-Awareness, Insight, Connection, and Purpose-based on neuroscience research. Each module offers 27 practices (5-30 minutes each). This study focuses on the Awareness and Insight modules, which teach breath and body awareness and emotion noting to support mindfulness in daily life. Participants will be asked to use the app 5-30 minutes per day, following 4 weeks of Awareness content, then 4 weeks of Insight. After 8 weeks, they will have open access to all modules and be encouraged to explore additional practices as they find helpful during follow-up.
Johns Hopkins Community Physicians, Remington
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGJohns Hopkins Bayview Pediatrics (Baltimore Medical System, Yard 56)
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGJohns Hopkins Community Physicians, Canton Crossing
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGHarriet Lane Clinic
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
RECRUITINGJohns Hopkins University Center for Adolescent and Young Adult Health
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
RECRUITINGJohns Hopkins Community Physicians, Water's Edge
Belcamp, Maryland, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGJohns Hopkins Community Physicians, Bowie
Bowie, Maryland, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGJohns Hopkins Community Physicians, Howard County Pediatrics
Columbia, Maryland, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGJohns Hopkins Community Physicians, Glen Burnie
Glen Burnie, Maryland, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGJohns Hopkins Community Physicians, Hagerstown
Hagerstown, Maryland, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITING...and 3 more locations
Alcohol Use (total standard drinks) in the past 30 days
Alcohol use (total standard drinks) in the past 30 days, measured via Timeline Follow Back (TLFB) calendar method at five time points (baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months) over a one year follow-up period, compared between BMAI and BMAI + MT groups.
Time frame: Baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 12 months
Acceptability of intervention (adolescent report) assessed by the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire-Patient Report
Adolescent reported acceptability of BMAI and MT intervention components will be assessed via the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire-Patient Report (CSQ-Patient Report) collected at month 2. CSQ Patient Report scale ranges from 0 to 32 with higher scores indicating greater satisfaction with the intervention.
Time frame: Month 2
Acceptability of intervention (caregiver report) assessed by the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire-Caregiver Report
Caregiver reported acceptability of BMAI and MT components will be assessed via the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire-Caregiver Report (CSQ-Caregiver Report) at month 2. CSQ Caregiver Report scale ranges from 0 to 32 with higher scores indicating greater satisfaction with the intervention.
Time frame: Month 2
Acceptability of intervention (provider report) assessed by the Provider Satisfaction Questionnaire
Provider reported acceptability of BMAI and MT components will be assessed via the Provider Satisfaction Questionnaire (PSQ), an adapted form of the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire at month 3 and month 12. PSQ scale ranges from 0 to 32 with higher scores indicating greater satisfaction with the intervention.
Time frame: month 3, and month 12
Intervention experiences, perspectives, and preferences (adolescent report) assessed by qualitative interview
Adolescent reported personal experiences, perspectives, and preferences related to BMAI and MT components, assessed via qualitative semi-structured interviews obtained from adolescent participants at 2 months. Themes and sub-themes using a grounded theory, inductive approach will be used to identify patient experience with the study arms and interventions.
Time frame: Month 2
Intervention experiences, perspectives, and preferences (caregiver report) assessed by qualitative interview
Caregiver reported personal experiences, perspectives, and preferences related to BMAI and MT components, assessed via qualitative semi-structured interviews obtained from caregiver's of adolescent participants at 2 months. Themes and sub-themes using a grounded theory, inductive approach will be used to identify patient experience with the study arms and interventions.
Time frame: Month 2
Intervention experiences, perspectives, and preferences (provider report) assessed by qualitative interview
Provider reported personal experiences, perspectives, and preferences related to BMAI and MT components, assessed via qualitative semi-structured interviews obtained from pediatric primary care (PPC) providers obtained at months 3 and 12. Themes and sub-themes using a grounded theory, inductive approach will be used to identify patient experience with the study arms and interventions.
Time frame: month 3, and month 12
Implementation barriers and facilitators for SBIRT and BMAI (provider report)
Provider reported barriers and facilitators related to implementation of BMAI intervention and screening brief intervention and referral to treatment (SBIRT) framework, assessed using items about perceived barriers and facilitators from the SBIRT provider questionnaire obtained from PPC clinicians at baseline, month 3, and month 12. The SBIRT provider questionnaire includes questions on substance use screening, brief intervention, and SBIRT practices and perceived barriers and facilitators to screening, providing brief interventions, and implementing SBIRT in their PPC office setting. Number of barriers, number of facilitators, and percentage of providers reporting specific types of barriers and facilitators will be serve as the implementation outcome.
Time frame: Baseline, month 3, and month 12
Percentage of providers reporting barriers and facilitators (provider report)
Percentage of providers reporting specific types of barriers and facilitators will serve as the implementation outcome.
Time frame: Baseline, month 3, and month 12
Heavy episodic drinking (HED) days in the past 30 days
Heavy episodic drinking days in the past 30 days (defined as number of days in the past 30 days where participant consumed \> 5 drinks for male and \> 4 drinks for female participants in single session), measured via TLFB calendar method at five time points (baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months) over a one year follow-up period, compared between BMAI and BMAI + MT groups.
Time frame: Baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 12 months
Cannabis use days in the past 30 days
Cannabis/ tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) product use days in the past 30 days, measured via TLFB calendar method at five time points (baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months) over a one year follow-up period, compared between BMAI and BMAI + MT groups.
Time frame: Baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 12 months
Tobacco/nicotine use days in the past 30 days
Tobacco/nicotine product use days in the past 30 days, measured via TLFB calendar method at five time points (baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months) over a one year follow-up period, compared between BMAI and BMAI + MT groups.
Time frame: Baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 12 months
Other drug use days in the past 30 days
Other drug use days in the past 30 days (defined as number of days in the past 30 days where drugs other than alcohol, cannabis, tobacco/nicotine were used), measured via TLFB calendar method at five time points (baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months) over a one year follow-up period, compared between BMAI and BMAI + MT groups.
Time frame: Baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 12 months
Alcohol-related problem severity assessed by the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test
Alcohol-related problem severity measured via the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test consumption questions (AUDIT-C) at five time points (baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months) over a one year follow-up period, compared between BMAI and BMAI + MT groups. The AUDIT-C consists of 3 items assessing typical drinking frequency, typical drinking quantity, and frequency of heavy episodic drinking, each scored from 0 to 4. The AUDIT-C composite score has a scale that ranges from 0 to 12 with higher scores indicating greater alcohol problem severity. A total AUDIT-C score \> or equal to 3 has a good sensitivity and specificity for detecting alcohol use problems in adolescents.
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Time frame: Baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 12 months
Recent Alcohol Consumption (past 7 days)
Recent alcohol consumption (defined as total number of standard drinks in the past 7 days), measured via TLFB calendar method at five time points (baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months) over a one year follow-up period, compared between BMAI and BMAI + MT groups.
Time frame: Baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 12 months
Alcohol-related consequences assessed by the Short Index of Problems
Alcohol-related consequences assessed with the Short Index of Problems (SIP) related to alcohol consumption at five time points (baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months) over a one year follow-up period, compared between BMAI and BMAI + MT groups. The SIP consists of 17 questions each scored from 0 to 3. The scale ranges from 0 to 51 with higher scores indicating greater occurrence of alcohol related negative consequences.
Time frame: Baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 12 months
Emergency health service utilization
Emergency health service utilization (defined as the number of visits to the emergency room for health treatment), measured via 1-item on emergency department visits from The Economic Form-90 at five time points (baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months) over a one year follow-up period, compared between BMAI and BMAI + MT groups.
Time frame: Baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 12 months
Quality of Life (QOL) as assessed by the Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS)
Quality of Life (QOL) assessed with the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) pediatric global health (PGH-7) index at five time points (baseline and 1, 2, 3, and 12 months) over a one year follow-up period, compared between BMAI and BMAI + MT groups.The PROMIS PGH-7 index consists of 7 questions each scored from 1 to 5. The scale ranges from 7 to 35 with higher scores indicating greater QOL and general health.
Time frame: Baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 12 months