Wright Cassandra J C, Dietze Paul M, Lim Megan S C
MacFarlane Burnet Institute for Medical and Public Health Research, Centre for Population Health, Melbourne, Australia.
Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth. 2017 Jun 20;5(6):e79. doi: 10.2196/mhealth.6497.
Brief interventions can reduce alcohol consumption in young people through screening and delivery of personally relevant feedback. Recently, Web and mobile platforms have been harnessed to increase the reach of brief interventions. Existing literature on mobile-based alcohol brief interventions indicates mixed use of theory in developing interventions. There is no research available to guide the development of SMS text messaging (short message service, SMS) interventions delivered during risky drinking events.
The aim of this study was to develop and pilot an alcohol-related risk-reduction brief intervention delivered by SMS to Australian young adults during drinking events. This paper describes the development of intervention message content, with specific focus on the context of delivery during drinking events.
A sample of 42 young adults attended 4 workshops; these comprised focus-group style discussion on drinking habits and motivations, discussion of intervention design, analysis of existing alcohol media campaigns, and participant development of message content. Data were analyzed thematically.
Participants described a focus on having fun and blocking out any incongruent negative influences during drinking episodes. For content to be acceptable, nonjudgmental and non-authoritative language was deemed essential. A preference for short, actionable messages was observed, including suggestions for reminders around drinking water, organizing transport home, checking on friends, and plans the next day. Participants were excited about the potential for messages to be tailored to individuals, as previous alcohol-related campaigns were deemed too generic and often irrelevant. Normative-based messages were also perceived as largely irrelevant as participants felt that they understood the drinking-related norms of their immediate peers already.
Findings from this study offer insights into young adults' drinking events and practical advice for designing alcohol-related brief interventions. During our formative development process, we demonstrated a neat correspondence between young people's preferences for alcohol harm reduction interventions and the theoretical principles of brief interventions, including acceptable topics and message style.
简短干预措施可通过筛查并提供与个人相关的反馈来减少年轻人的酒精摄入量。最近,网络和移动平台已被用于扩大简短干预措施的覆盖面。现有关于基于移动设备的酒精简短干预措施的文献表明,在开发干预措施时对理论的运用参差不齐。目前尚无研究可指导在危险饮酒事件期间提供的短信(短消息服务,SMS)干预措施的开发。
本研究的目的是开发并试行一种通过短信向澳大利亚年轻人在饮酒事件期间提供的与酒精相关的降低风险简短干预措施。本文描述了干预信息内容的开发,特别关注饮酒事件期间的传递背景。
42名年轻人参加了4次工作坊;这些工作坊包括关于饮酒习惯和动机的焦点小组式讨论、干预设计讨论、现有酒精媒体宣传活动分析以及参与者对信息内容的开发。对数据进行了主题分析。
参与者描述了在饮酒期间专注于享受乐趣并排除任何不一致的负面影响。为使内容可接受,非评判性和非权威性的语言被认为至关重要。观察到对简短、可操作信息的偏好,包括关于喝水提醒、安排回家交通、查看朋友情况以及次日计划的建议。参与者对信息可针对个人进行定制的可能性感到兴奋,因为之前与酒精相关的宣传活动被认为过于笼统且往往不相关。基于规范的信息也被认为在很大程度上不相关,因为参与者觉得他们已经了解了直接同伴的饮酒相关规范。
本研究的结果为年轻人的饮酒事件提供了见解,并为设计与酒精相关的简短干预措施提供了实用建议。在我们的形成性开发过程中,我们展示了年轻人对酒精危害减少干预措施的偏好与简短干预措施的理论原则之间的紧密对应关系,包括可接受的主题和信息风格。