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Interactive Alcohol Decision-Making Programs

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Heavy Drinking
Interventions
Behavioral: Narrator Backstory
Behavioral: Empathic Statements/Reflections
Behavioral: Female Narrator
Behavioral: MI Techniques
Behavioral: Male Narrator
Registration Number
NCT05398315
Lead Sponsor
Wayne State University
Brief Summary

This project aims to develop a maximally effective, computer-delivered brief intervention (CDBI) for reducing heavy alcohol use. More specifically, the investigators will examine outcomes of different versions of a CDBI in which the presence/absence of empathic statements, the gender of the narrator, the presence/absence of a narrator backstory, and the use/non-use of motivational interviewing techniques are systematically manipulated using a factorial design. Participants (352 heavy drinkers) will be randomly assigned to 1 of 16 intervention conditions, representing all combinations of the 4 variables being manipulated. The investigators hypothesize that there will be significant main effects of all four factors being manipulated on (a) subjective reactions to the CDBI and (b) alcohol outcomes at 1-month follow-up

Detailed Description

The National Survey on Drug Use and Health estimates that 19.3 million individuals ages 12 and over met criteria for an alcohol use disorder in the past year, fully 87.4% of whom neither received any treatment in the past 12 months, nor wanted it. Recognition of this tremendous gap has led to efforts, both nationally and internationally, to implement proactive screening and brief intervention. Brief interventions have proven efficacious in reducing unhealthy drinking with effect sizes in meta-analyses ranging from small to moderate. Brief interventions are also uniquely applicable to non-treatment-seeking populations, who may refuse extended treatment but accept a minimal, opportunistic intervention. However, the public health impact of brief interventions has been limited by substantial difficulty with implementation. Further, positive overall findings in meta-analyses obscure the results of multiple rigorous efficacy trials showing no brief intervention effect on alcohol use. Both of these issues-the implementation challenges and the inconsistency in outcomes-suggest that changes are needed before brief alcohol interventions can meet their full potential.

Technology offers exciting potential in both respects. First, computer-delivered brief interventions (CDBIs) can be presented inexpensively, with perfect fidelity, and without the need for training or provider time. Second, their replicability, flexibility, and modularity makes them the perfect platform for (a) isolating the active ingredients that are associated with positive outcomes; and thereby (b) continually optimizing CDBIs to achieve cumulative increases in efficacy.

The overall goal of this research is to develop a maximally effective and replicable CDBI for reducing heavy alcohol use. To accomplish this, the investigators will use the Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST), an efficient method for optimizing intervention content that uses factorial designs to evaluate main and interaction effects of specific intervention components. The selection of components will be guided by: (a) Common Factors Theory, which highlights the tremendous contribution of relational factors, such as empathy, alliance and positive regard to therapy outcomes, but which is of unknown relevance to CDBIs; and (b) the Media Equation Theory, which suggests that people automatically respond to computers in social ways, particularly when those computers replicate human characteristics. Guided by this literature, the investigators will examine outcomes of a CDBI in which empathic statements, the gender of the narrator, the presence/absence of a narrator backstory, and the use/non-use of motivational interviewing techniques are systematically manipulated using a factorial design.

Specific aims are as follows:

1. Develop 16 distinct, time-consistent, computer-delivered sessions representing all possible combinations of the following four factors (each of which will be binary; i.e. either present vs. absent or male vs. female): (1) narrator gender, (2) empathic statements and reflections, (3) narrator backstory, and (4) use of motivational techniques.

2. Evaluate main and interaction effects of the five factors by randomly assigning 352 heavy drinkers to the 16 sessions (each of the four factors being presented to half of the participants) and evaluating (1) subjective reactions to the CDBI at baseline and (2) alcohol use at 1-month follow-up.

Hypothesis 1. Subjective reactions to the CDBI, disclosure of alcohol use and consequences, and motivation to reduce alcohol use will be higher and alcohol use at follow-up will be lower in the presence of (1) empathic statements, (2) a narrator backstory and (3) motivational techniques. The effects of narrator gender will be examined in an exploratory way (i.e., no a priori hypotheses).

Hypothesis 2. Subjective reactions will be more positive, disclosure and motivation to reduce alcohol use will be higher, and alcohol use at follow-up will be lower when the two relational factors (empathy and narrator backstory) are combined with the presence of motivational content.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
352
Inclusion Criteria
  • Over age 18
  • Access to the internet.
  • Males must consume at least 14 drinks per week or 4 drinks per day
  • Females must consume at least 7 drinks per week or 3 drinks per day
Exclusion Criteria
  • Under age 18
  • No internet access
  • Males who consume less than 14 drinks per week or 4 drinks per day
  • Females who consume less than 7 drinks per week or 3 drinks per day

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
FACTORIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Empathic Statements, No MI, Female, No BackstoryFemale NarratorPresence of empathic statements. No MI techniques or narrator backstory. Female narrator.
No Empathic Statements, MI, Female, No BackstoryMI TechniquesPresence of MI techniques. No empathic statements or narrator backstory. Female narrator.
No Empathic Statements, MI, Male, BackstoryMale NarratorPresence of MI techniques and narrator backstory. No empathic statements. Male narrator.
Empathic Statements, MI, Female, No BackstoryFemale NarratorPresence of empathic statements and MI techniques. Female narrator. No narrator backstory.
Empathic Statements, No MI, Male, No BackstoryMale NarratorPresence of empathic statements. No MI techniques or narrator backstory. Male narrator.
No Empathic Statements, No MI, Male, BackstoryNarrator BackstoryPresence of narrator backstory. No empathic statements or MI techniques. Male narrator.
Empathic Statements, No MI, Male, BackstoryMale NarratorPresence of empathic statements and narrator backstory. No MI techniques. Male narrator.
Empathic Statements, MI, Male, No BackstoryMI TechniquesPresence of empathic statements and MI techniques. Male narrator. No narrator backstory.
No Empathic Statements, No MI, Female, No BackstoryFemale NarratorNo empathic statements, MI techniques or narrator backstory. Female narrator
No Empathic Statements, No MI, Male, No BackstoryMale NarratorNo empathic statements, MI techniques or narrator backstory. Male narrator
Empathic Statements, MI, Male, BackstoryMale NarratorPresence of empathic statements, MI techniques and narrator backstory. Male narrator.
Empathic Statements, MI, Male, No BackstoryEmpathic Statements/ReflectionsPresence of empathic statements and MI techniques. Male narrator. No narrator backstory.
No Empathic Statements, No MI, Female, BackstoryNarrator BackstoryNo empathic statements or MI techniques. Presence of narrator backstory. Female narrator
Empathic Statements, MI, Female, BackstoryNarrator BackstoryPresence of empathic statements, MI techniques and narrator backstory. Female narrator
Empathic Statements, MI, Male, BackstoryEmpathic Statements/ReflectionsPresence of empathic statements, MI techniques and narrator backstory. Male narrator.
No Empathic Statements, MI, Female, BackstoryFemale NarratorPresence of MI techniques and narrator backstory. No empathic statements. Female narrator.
Empathic Statements, MI, Male, No BackstoryMale NarratorPresence of empathic statements and MI techniques. Male narrator. No narrator backstory.
Empathic Statements, MI, Female, BackstoryMI TechniquesPresence of empathic statements, MI techniques and narrator backstory. Female narrator
Empathic Statements, MI, Male, BackstoryMI TechniquesPresence of empathic statements, MI techniques and narrator backstory. Male narrator.
Empathic Statements, No MI, Female, No BackstoryEmpathic Statements/ReflectionsPresence of empathic statements. No MI techniques or narrator backstory. Female narrator.
Empathic Statements, MI, Female, No BackstoryEmpathic Statements/ReflectionsPresence of empathic statements and MI techniques. Female narrator. No narrator backstory.
No Empathic Statements, No MI, Female, BackstoryFemale NarratorNo empathic statements or MI techniques. Presence of narrator backstory. Female narrator
Empathic Statements, MI, Female, BackstoryEmpathic Statements/ReflectionsPresence of empathic statements, MI techniques and narrator backstory. Female narrator
Empathic Statements, MI, Female, BackstoryFemale NarratorPresence of empathic statements, MI techniques and narrator backstory. Female narrator
No Empathic Statements, MI, Female, BackstoryNarrator BackstoryPresence of MI techniques and narrator backstory. No empathic statements. Female narrator.
Empathic Statements, No MI, Male, No BackstoryEmpathic Statements/ReflectionsPresence of empathic statements. No MI techniques or narrator backstory. Male narrator.
No Empathic Statements, MI, Male, BackstoryNarrator BackstoryPresence of MI techniques and narrator backstory. No empathic statements. Male narrator.
No Empathic Statements, MI, Male, BackstoryMI TechniquesPresence of MI techniques and narrator backstory. No empathic statements. Male narrator.
Empathic Statements, MI, Male, BackstoryNarrator BackstoryPresence of empathic statements, MI techniques and narrator backstory. Male narrator.
No Empathic Statements, MI, Female, BackstoryMI TechniquesPresence of MI techniques and narrator backstory. No empathic statements. Female narrator.
Empathic Statements, No MI, Female, BackstoryEmpathic Statements/ReflectionsPresence of empathic statements and narrator backstory. No MI techniques. Female narrator.
Empathic Statements, No MI, Female, BackstoryFemale NarratorPresence of empathic statements and narrator backstory. No MI techniques. Female narrator.
No Empathic Statements, MI, Female, No BackstoryFemale NarratorPresence of MI techniques. No empathic statements or narrator backstory. Female narrator.
No Empathic Statements, MI, Male, No BackstoryMale NarratorPresence of MI techniques. No empathic statements or narrator backstory. Male narrator.
No Empathic Statements, MI, Male, No BackstoryMI TechniquesPresence of MI techniques. No empathic statements or narrator backstory. Male narrator.
No Empathic Statements, No MI, Male, BackstoryMale NarratorPresence of narrator backstory. No empathic statements or MI techniques. Male narrator.
Empathic Statements, No MI, Male, BackstoryEmpathic Statements/ReflectionsPresence of empathic statements and narrator backstory. No MI techniques. Male narrator.
Empathic Statements, No MI, Male, BackstoryNarrator BackstoryPresence of empathic statements and narrator backstory. No MI techniques. Male narrator.
Empathic Statements, MI, Female, No BackstoryMI TechniquesPresence of empathic statements and MI techniques. Female narrator. No narrator backstory.
Empathic Statements, No MI, Female, BackstoryNarrator BackstoryPresence of empathic statements and narrator backstory. No MI techniques. Female narrator.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Quantity and Frequency of Alcohol UseGiven pre-intervention and at 1-month follow-up

The Timeline Followback Questionnaire (TLFB) will be given to assess past month alcohol use.

Change in Alcohol-Related ConsequencesGiven pre-intervention and at 1-month follow-up

Assessed with the Brief Young Adult Alcohol Consequences Questionnaire which assess the occurrence/ non-occurrence of 24 alcohol consequences.

Participant Satisfaction with the InterventionGiven immediately after completing the intervention

Fifteen item measure assessing how much participants liked the intervention and felt respected by it.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Wayne State University

🇺🇸

Detroit, Michigan, United States

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