Effectiveness of a Proactive Mail-Based Alcohol Internet Intervention for University Students: Dismantling the Assessment and Feedback Components in a Randomized Controlled Trial

被引:43
作者
Bendtsen, Preben [1 ]
McCambridge, Jim [2 ]
Bendtsen, Marcus [1 ,3 ]
Karlsson, Nadine [1 ]
Nilsen, Per [1 ]
机构
[1] Linkoping Univ, Dept Med & Hlth Sci, Fac Hlth Sci, SE-58183 Linkoping, Sweden
[2] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Fac Publ Hlth & Policy, London WC1, England
[3] Linkoping Univ, Dept Comp & Informat Sci, Inst Technol, SE-58183 Linkoping, Sweden
基金
英国惠康基金;
关键词
Alcohol drinking; Web-based intervention; proactive intervention; university students; PERSONALIZED NORMATIVE FEEDBACK; COLLEGE-STUDENTS; HEAVY-DRINKING; HAZARDOUS DRINKING; ONLINE; CONSUMPTION; CHALLENGES;
D O I
10.2196/jmir.2062
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: University students in Sweden routinely receive proactive mail-based alcohol Internet interventions sent from student health services. This intervention provides personalized normative feedback on alcohol consumption with suggestions on how to decrease drinking. Earlier feasibility trials by our group and others have examined effectiveness in simple parallel-groups designs. Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of electronic screening and brief intervention, using a randomized controlled trial design that takes account of baseline assessment reactivity (and other possible effects of the research process) due to the similarity between the intervention and assessment content. The design of the study allowed for exploration of the magnitude of the assessment effects per se. Methods: This trial used a dismantling design and randomly assigned 5227 students to 3 groups: (1) routine practice assessment and feedback, (2) assessment-only without feedback, and (3) neither assessment nor feedback. At baseline all participants were blinded to study participation, with no contact being made with group 3. We approached students 2 months later to participate in a cross-sectional alcohol survey. All interventions were fully automated and did not have any human involvement. All data used in the analysis were based on self-assessment using questionnaires. The participants were unaware that they were participating in a trial and thus were also blinded to which group they were randomly assigned. Results: Overall, 44.69% (n = 2336) of those targeted for study completed follow-up. Attrition was similar in groups 1 (697/1742, 40.01%) and 2 (737/1742, 42.31% retained) and lower in group 3 (902/1743, 51.75% retained). Intention-to-treat analyses among all participants regardless of their baseline drinking status revealed no differences between groups in all alcohol parameters at the 2-month follow-up. Per-protocol analyses of groups 1 and 2 among those who accepted the email intervention (36.2% of the students who were offered the intervention in group 1 and 37.3% of the students in group2) and who were risky drinkers at baseline (60.7% follow-up rate in group 1 and 63.5% in group 2) suggested possible small beneficial effects on weekly consumption attributable to feedback. Conclusions: This approach to outcome evaluation is highly conservative, and small benefits may follow the actual uptake of feedback intervention in students who are risky drinkers, the precise target group.
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页数:12
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