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Brief Intervention Based on the Theory of Planned Behavior to Reduce Alcohol Consumption in University Students

D

Daniela Romero Reyes

Status

Completed

Conditions

Alcohol; Harmful Use

Treatments

Behavioral: Brief Intervention Based on the Theory of Planned Behavior to Reduce Alcohol Consumption in University Students

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Brief behavioral intervention designed from the guidelines of the Theory of Planned Action (TAP) of Ajzen (1991). It has the general objective of reducing the intention and hazardous and harmful consumption of alcohol in young university students in the first year of their undergraduate degree. The following specific objectives are considered: (a) Impact on the personal and descriptive norm by modifying the perception of the actual use of alcohol and its level of acceptance among the population of university students. (b) Modify attitudes towards consumption by reducing the value attributed to the expectations associated with risky alcohol consumption. (c) Increase perceived behavioral control and self-efficacy to avoid alcohol consumption behavior by: establishing a goal, consumption planning, and increase assertive communication.(d) Reduce the negative consequences of the use of alcohol in different situations of young people through pleasant healthy activities. e) Increase the intention to seek help for alcohol-related problems.The intervention will be developed through 3 phases. The first phase corresponds to the pre-intervention evaluation, the second phase concerns the two intervention sessions and the third phase is the post-intervention evaluation. Hypothesis: The mean alcohol consumption will be lower in young adults with hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption in the experimental group who received a brief online intervention compared to the control group.

Full description

The hazardous and harmful consumption of alcohol in university students is a public health problem, as shown by various international studies. The consequences of consumption, the harmful effects of alcohol, impact various areas of the lives of young adults and those close to them, among which can be mentioned the increased risk of physical harm, legal problems, breach of school, relational responsibilities, negative social interactions, and processing can also be affected cognitive.

The WHO's report of Independent High-Level Commission on Noncommunicable Diseases states that national governments and cities should participate in measures related to noncommunicable diseases, including discouraging the harmful use of alcohol and promote mental health. The global strategy to reduce the harmful use of alcohol includes support for screening and preventive interventions related to hazardous alcohol use in primary health care and other settings. In Mexico, the General Health Law in its article 185, establishes the program for the prevention, reduction, and treatment of the harmful use of alcohol, attention to alcoholism, the prevention of diseases derived from it. Among its actions is the promotion of prevention, early detection, guidance, care, referral and treatment services for people and groups with harmful use of alcohol, avoiding all forms of stigmatization. The Official Mexican Standard 028 for the prevention, treatment, and control of addictions, refers to prevention as those actions aimed at reducing the non-therapeutic consumption of psychoactive substances and indicates that preventive programs must have a theoretical and methodological framework; include vulnerable populations, considering mainly the youth population.

From the international and national scene, the need to preventively attend to the harmful consumption of alcohol is evident, emphasizing the youth population. As measures in such circumstances, online interventions have been effective in reducing risky alcohol consumption, the Anglo-Saxon scientific literature supports the use of the Internet to carry out interventions aimed at reducing alcohol consumption in university students. In Latin America, a first systematic review on brief interventions reported that the interventions studied were given in a traditional face-to-face format, most of them in Brazil and Mexico, with heterogeneous theoretical and methodological approaches used, however, using the internet as a means to carry out brief interventions can be beneficial for university students who are in regions where there is little information on alcohol consumption or for students who have difficulties participating in face-to-face strategies, the brief interventions can serve as health literacy tools mental health that encourage young people to seek early help.

There is increasing evidence that public health interventions based on theories of social and behavioral sciences are more effective than those that do not have such a theoretical basis, the theory is a fundamental element of behavioral interventions, theories explain the pathways that lead or predict behavior and thus provide guidance on how to influence or modify said behavior.

The Theory of Planned Action is a strong theoretical basis for developing interventions to make changes in health-related behaviors. According to TAP, behavior is preceded by intentions, which in turn are shaped by attitudes, subjective norm, and perceived behavioral control. Attitudes are made up of behavioral beliefs (beliefs about the results of behavior and the evaluation of these results), the subjective norm is made up of normative beliefs, that is, beliefs about the normative expectations of others and the motivation to comply with them. these expectations, perceived behavioral control is integrated from control beliefs (beliefs about the presence of factors that can facilitate or hinder behavior), the perceived behavioral control construct is compatible with Bandura's perceived self-efficacy , which refers to the perception of confidence in being able to carry out a behavior, beliefs of self-efficacy or perceived behavioral control are located by TAP in a framework of relationships between attitudes, beliefs, intentions and behavior.

Study Design:

An experimental methodology is contemplated with an experimental group and a control group on a waiting list, with pre and post evaluation.

Population, sampling and sample:

The population will be made up of university students. The participants will be first-year university students. Through the G Power program, it is considered that for an effect size of .80, with a significance level of 0.05 and .80 power, each group (control and experimental) should be made up of 26 participants, 52 participants in total.

Procedure for data collection:

Quality assurance plan. In accordance with the Good Clinical Practices: Document of the Americas, procedures were developed for each of the four phases of the study

Enrollment

87 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 29 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Be a university student in the first or second year.
  • Be between 18 and 29 years old.
  • Voluntarily participate in the study.

Exclusion Criteria (post-hoc):

  • Presence of severe mental disorder (e.g., psychotic disorders).
  • Not having stable housing.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

87 participants in 2 patient groups

Experimental group with intervention
Experimental group
Description:
The experimental group will receive the intervention. First, the group will undergo a pre-intervention evaluation lasting 120 minutes. The intervention will consist of two synchronized virtual sessions of brief intervention with a cognitive-behavioral approach where various persuasive communication strategies will be implemented, definition of hazardous alcohol consumption, establishment of a consumption goal, social skills to deal with pressure to consume and plan of pleasant activities alternative to consumption, each session will last 120 minutes. Four weeks after the end of the intervention, the experimental group will carry out the post-intervention evaluation session in a virtual synchronized manner with a duration of 120 minutes.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Brief Intervention Based on the Theory of Planned Behavior to Reduce Alcohol Consumption in University Students
Control group
No Intervention group
Description:
The control group will participate in a pre-intervention evaluation session. Four weeks after the end of the last intra-session evaluation session, the control group will participate in the post-intervention evaluation in a virtual synchronized manner with a duration of 120 minutes.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

José Luis Ybarra Sagarduy, Psychology; Daniela Romero Reyes, Psychology

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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