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Protective Behavioral Strategies and Brief Alcohol Interventions

University of Missouri (MU) logo

University of Missouri (MU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Alcohol Consumption

Treatments

Behavioral: Personalized Normative Feedback
Behavioral: Protective Behavioral Strategies
Behavioral: Alcohol Education

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT01168726
1R21AA016779-01A2 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
Protective Behaviors

Details and patient eligibility

About

Excessive college student drinking represents an important public health problem for both the students themselves and those with whom they interact. The objective of this research is to better understand how to reduce such high-risk drinking by improving prevention and treatment programs, which will provide an overall public health benefit. Subjects in the study will be randomized to one of two brief intervention conditions or an education-only control condition. It is hypothesized that those in the intervention conditions will report greater reductions in alcohol use and alcohol-related problems than those in the control condition.

Full description

The primary objective of this project is to examine factors that are associated with the effectiveness of intervention programs designed to reduce high-risk drinking among heavy drinking college students. Previous research has found similar effect sizes for different types of multi-component, brief interventions among college students, but little research has assessed the degree to which specific components of such interventions are associated with intervention outcomes. One common component of motivational enhancing interventions among college students involves providing cognitive-behavioral self-control strategies designed to reduce one's use of alcohol, which we term "protective behavioral strategies" (PBS). However, there are two important factors that limit our understanding of the effects of PBS on client outcomes. First, the use of these strategies in motivational enhancing programs has generally not been assessed in a systematic manner, due in part to the fact that until recently a standardized measure of such strategies did not exist. Second, researchers have yet to conduct studies that dismantle the specific effects associated with the PBS component on client outcomes. That is, studies have not tested interventions with and without assessment and feedback regarding a client's use of PBS. Participants in this project will be "at-risk" college student drinkers who will be assigned to one of three conditions: a brief intervention that includes a focus on PBS, a brief intervention that does not include this focus, and an education-only control condition. Participant will complete self-report measures of alcohol-related variables at baseline, 30-day, and 6-month follow-ups. Mixed-model analyses will be used to determine the effectiveness of the intervention programs, and structural equation modeling will be used to determine if increases in PBS result in reductions in alcohol use/alcohol-related problems.

Enrollment

365 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 24 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • At least one binge drinking episode in the preceding month

Exclusion criteria

  • At-risk for alcohol dependence or major depressive disorder

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

365 participants in 3 patient groups

Protective Behavioral Strategies
Experimental group
Description:
Personalized feedback on use of protective behavioral strategies.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Protective Behavioral Strategies
Personalized Normative Feedback
Experimental group
Description:
Personalized feedback on how one's own drinking compares to relevant norms.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Personalized Normative Feedback
Alcohol Education
Active Comparator group
Description:
Educational information about harms associated with heavy drinking.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Alcohol Education

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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