Neighbors Clayton, Lewis Melissa A, LaBrie Joseph, DiBello Angelo M, Young Chelsie M, Rinker Dipali V, Litt Dana, Rodriguez Lindsey M, Knee C Raymond, Hamor Ezekiel, Jerabeck Jessica M, Larimer Mary E
Department of Psychology.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences.
J Consult Clin Psychol. 2016 Mar;84(3):238-47. doi: 10.1037/ccp0000067. Epub 2016 Jan 4.
Given widespread alcohol misuse among college students, numerous intervention programs have been developed, including personalized normative feedback (PNF). Most research evaluating PNF assumes that presenting one's own perceived norms is necessary to correct normative misperceptions and thereby reduce drinking. Alternatively, simply providing social comparison information showing that one drinks more than others may be sufficient. The present study evaluated the efficacy of full PNF (one's own drinking, campus drinking rates, and perceived norms) and a partial personalized social comparison feedback (PSCF; one's own drinking and campus drinking rates) in a randomized trial among heavy-drinking college students.
Participants included 623 heavy-drinking students from 3 universities. Assessments occurred at baseline and 3- and 6-months postbaseline.
Primary analyses examined differences across 4 drinking outcomes (drinks per week, total drinks past month, frequency of past month drinking, and negative alcohol-related consequences) at 3- and 6-month follow-ups controlling for the baseline variable. Results revealed significant reductions across all alcohol consumption outcomes at 3 months in both intervention conditions compared to attention-control. Mediation analyses demonstrated significant indirect effects of the intervention on 6-month drinking through changes in perceived norms at 3 months. Moreover, evidence emerged for changes in drinking at 3 months as a mediator of the association between PSCF and 6-month perceived norms.
The present research suggests PNF may not require explicit consideration of one's perceived norms to be effective and that direct social comparison provides an alternative theoretical mechanism for PNF efficacy.
鉴于大学生中普遍存在酒精滥用现象,已开发出众多干预项目,包括个性化规范反馈(PNF)。大多数评估PNF的研究假定,呈现个人感知到的规范对于纠正规范误解从而减少饮酒是必要的。或者,仅仅提供社会比较信息表明自己饮酒比他人多可能就足够了。本研究在一项针对重度饮酒大学生的随机试验中评估了完整PNF(个人饮酒情况、校园饮酒率和感知规范)和部分个性化社会比较反馈(PSCF;个人饮酒情况和校园饮酒率)的效果。
参与者包括来自3所大学的623名重度饮酒学生。在基线以及基线后3个月和6个月进行评估。
主要分析在控制基线变量的情况下,考察了3个月和6个月随访时4个饮酒结果(每周饮酒量、过去一个月的饮酒总量、过去一个月饮酒频率以及与酒精相关的负面后果)的差异。结果显示,与注意力控制组相比,两种干预条件下在3个月时所有酒精消费结果均有显著下降。中介分析表明,干预通过3个月时感知规范的变化对6个月时的饮酒产生显著间接影响。此外,有证据表明3个月时饮酒的变化是PSCF与6个月时感知规范之间关联的中介。
本研究表明,PNF可能无需明确考虑个人感知到的规范即可有效,直接社会比较为PNF的有效性提供了另一种理论机制。