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An Exercise App to Reduce Young Adults' MJ Use

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Marijuana Smoking
Interventions
Behavioral: Personalized Feedback and Exercise
Registration Number
NCT01863095
Lead Sponsor
State University of New York at Buffalo
Brief Summary

Currently, marijuana (MJ) is the most popular illicit drug, but there are few effective interventions to help young adults (age 18 to 25 years) to reduce their MJ intake. In this study, we will develop and initially test a smart phone app designed to promote exercise/physical activity as a positive alternative to MJ use. The app will be tested in an efficacy study in which MJ users are randomly to either receive personalized feedback about MJ use + use the exercise app or personalized feedback only. The results will contribute to knowledge about exercise/physical activity as a strategy for reducing young adults' MJ use and problems.

Detailed Description

Currently, marijuana (MJ) is the most popular illicit drug, with prevalence studies indicating increasing use among young adults (Johnston et al., 2011). Even so, there are few effective interventions to help MJ users reduce their intake to avoid negative consequences, including MJ dependence. The investigators propose a Stage 1 efficacy study to develop and initially test an innovative intervention to reduce MJ use among young adults who regularly use MJ (\> 3 episodes/week). The intervention includes elements from the Marijuana Check-Up (MCU; Stephens et al., 2007), a MI-based brief intervention that has shown promise for reducing MJ use. It also incorporates findings from our ongoing research, which suggest that exercise/physical activity (PA) has potential as a positive alternative to MJ use. The investigators research also has shown that short (i.e., 10 minute) bouts of moderate or intense exercise reduce craving/urges to use MJ. Exercise interventions have successfully reduced use of licit substances, such as tobacco (e.g., Marcus et al., 2005) and alcohol (e.g., Brown et al., 2009), but have not been adequately tested for MJ use. The two aims of this R34 application are: 1) To develop an intervention that consists of four, 60-minute, in-person sessions composed of MCU content (e.g., personalized feedback, MI) as well as a smart phone application (app) that promotes exercise/physical activity (EA) as an alternative to MJ use. The EA, which will be designed to specifically appeal to young adults, will provide a readily-accessible, flexible, and convenient platform for personalized information and reminders that promote exercise/PA as a positive alternative to MJ use in ongoing daily life. 2) To conduct a pilot/efficacy study of the 4-week MCU+EA intervention vs. a MCU-only control condition. The investigators will use urn randomization to assign emerging/young-adult MJ users (N = 40) to the two conditions. During the 1-week baseline, 4-week intervention phase, and 1-, 3-, and 6-month follow-ups, all participants will use the smart phone app to provide real-time data on MJ-related variables and wear accelerometers to provide PA data. Multilevel modeling will be used to test our hypothesis that the MCU+EA intervention, compared to MCU-only control, will produce greater decreases in quantity and frequency of MJ use (and related MJ problems) at post-intervention and at each follow-up. Multilevel modeling also will be used to explore the real-time data to examine the role of variables such as urge/craving for MJ, social factors, and dosage of PA in the reduction of the quantity and frequency of MJ use. This Stage 1 study is unique and innovative in its development and use of a smart phone app to promote and evaluate exercise/PA as a positive alternative to MJ use in daily life. It includes cutting-edge technology (e.g., accelerometers, smart phone app) for real-time assessments. This research will make significant contributions to the limited knowledge of exercise/PA as a strategy for reducing MJ use and related problems among emerging and young adults.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
36
Inclusion Criteria
  • Regular Marijuana user interested in cutting down on marijuana use
  • Body Mass Index < 30
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Exclusion Criteria
  • Pregnant or planning to become pregnant
  • No legal problems
  • No substance abuse diagnosis
  • No history of substance abuse treatment
  • Medical contraindications to engaging in exercise
  • Psychological distress or psychiatric treatment
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Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Lifestyle counselingPersonalized Feedback and ExerciseMJ users assigned to this condition will participate in 4 individualized intervention sessions that are based on Motivational Interviewing principles. They will receive personalized feedback on their MJ use and will be provided a smart phone app on which they report their MJ use episodes, which also is designed to promote the use of exercise/physical activity as an alternative to MJ use. Level of Physical activity will be measured using accelerometers.
Personalized Feedback onlyPersonalized Feedback and ExerciseMJ users assigned to this condition will participate in 4 individualized intervention sessions that are based on Motivational Interviewing principles. They will only receive personalized feedback on their MJ use.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Physical ActivityChange in exercise at 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months after interventionts

Counts based on data collected by accelerometers.

Substance UseChange in marijuana use at 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months after intervention
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Center for Health Research

🇺🇸

Buffalo, New York, United States

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