White Helene R, Mun Eun Young, Pugh Lisa, Morgan Thomas J
Rutgers, State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2007 Aug;31(8):1380-91. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2007.00435.x. Epub 2007 Jun 5.
It is known that brief interventions for mandated college students decrease alcohol use and/or related problems in the short term. However, none of the existing studies has followed students' past 6 months. Therefore, we compared the long-term efficacy of 2 brief substance use feedback interventions for mandated college students.
We followed up mandated students (N=348) who were randomly assigned to either a brief motivational interview (BMI; n=180) or a written feedback-only (WF; n=168) intervention at 4 months and 15 months postintervention.
Long-term follow-up data revealed that students, at the aggregate level, decreased their peak blood alcohol concentration (BAC) levels, number of drinks per week, and number of alcohol-related problems at 15 months postintervention compared with their baseline levels. With the exception of peak BAC, the observed long-term reduction was mainly due to the positive change among students who received the BMI intervention. Students in the BMI intervention showed significantly lower levels of alcohol-related problems at 15 months than those in the WF intervention. The BMI intervention more effectively reduced within-individual alcohol-related problems during the initial 4 months, and more successfully curbed the subsequent increase in alcohol use frequency and number of drinks per week during the 11 months between the 2 follow-up assessments.
The results suggest that brief substance use interventions reduce the riskiest type of alcohol use (e.g., peak BAC) among mandated college students over the long term, and that sleeper effects of in-person personal feedback interventions (PFIs) exist. In-person PFIs in the context of a motivational interview may be more efficacious in the long term than written feedback-only interventions for mandated students. Future studies comparing interventions for college students should extend follow-up for longer periods of time.
众所周知,针对强制要求参加的大学生进行的简短干预措施能在短期内减少酒精使用和/或相关问题。然而,现有的研究均未对学生过去6个月的情况进行跟踪。因此,我们比较了两种针对强制要求参加的大学生的简短物质使用反馈干预措施的长期效果。
我们对在干预后4个月和15个月时被随机分配到简短动机访谈(BMI;n = 180)或仅书面反馈(WF;n = 168)干预组的强制要求参加的学生(N = 348)进行了随访。
长期随访数据显示,总体而言,与基线水平相比,学生在干预后15个月时的血液酒精浓度峰值(BAC)水平、每周饮酒量以及与酒精相关的问题数量均有所下降。除了BAC峰值外,观察到的长期下降主要归因于接受BMI干预的学生的积极变化。BMI干预组的学生在15个月时与酒精相关的问题水平显著低于WF干预组的学生。BMI干预在最初4个月内更有效地减少了个体内与酒精相关的问题,并且在两次随访评估之间的11个月内更成功地遏制了随后饮酒频率和每周饮酒量的增加。
结果表明,简短的物质使用干预措施能长期降低强制要求参加的大学生中最危险的酒精使用类型(例如BAC峰值),并且存在面对面个人反馈干预(PFI)的潜在效应。在动机访谈背景下的面对面PFI从长期来看可能比仅针对强制要求参加的学生的书面反馈干预更有效。未来比较大学生干预措施的研究应延长随访时间。