Kaner Eileen Fs, Beyer Fiona R, Garnett Claire, Crane David, Brown Jamie, Muirhead Colin, Redmore James, O'Donnell Amy, Newham James J, de Vocht Frank, Hickman Matthew, Brown Heather, Maniatopoulos Gregory, Michie Susan
Institute of Health and Society, Newcastle University, Richardson Road, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, NE2 4AX.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Sep 25;9(9):CD011479. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011479.pub2.
Excessive alcohol use contributes significantly to physical and psychological illness, injury and death, and a wide array of social harm in all age groups. A proven strategy for reducing excessive alcohol consumption levels is to offer a brief conversation-based intervention in primary care settings, but more recent technological innovations have enabled people to interact directly via computer, mobile device or smartphone with digital interventions designed to address problem alcohol consumption.
To assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of digital interventions for reducing hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption, alcohol-related problems, or both, in people living in the community, specifically: (i) Are digital interventions more effective and cost-effective than no intervention (or minimal input) controls? (ii) Are digital interventions at least equally effective as face-to-face brief alcohol interventions? (iii) What are the effective component behaviour change techniques (BCTs) of such interventions and their mechanisms of action? (iv) What theories or models have been used in the development and/or evaluation of the intervention? Secondary objectives were (i) to assess whether outcomes differ between trials where the digital intervention targets participants attending health, social care, education or other community-based settings and those where it is offered remotely via the internet or mobile phone platforms; (ii) to specify interventions according to their mode of delivery (e.g. functionality features) and assess the impact of mode of delivery on outcomes.
We searched CENTRAL, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, ERIC, HTA and Web of Knowledge databases; ClinicalTrials.com and WHO ICTRP trials registers and relevant websites to April 2017. We also checked the reference lists of included trials and relevant systematic reviews.
We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that evaluated the effectiveness of digital interventions compared with no intervention or with face-to-face interventions for reducing hazardous or harmful alcohol consumption in people living in the community and reported a measure of alcohol consumption.
We used standard methodological procedures expected by The Cochrane Collaboration.
We included 57 studies which randomised a total of 34,390 participants. The main sources of bias were from attrition and participant blinding (36% and 21% of studies respectively, high risk of bias). Forty one studies (42 comparisons, 19,241 participants) provided data for the primary meta-analysis, which demonstrated that participants using a digital intervention drank approximately 23 g alcohol weekly (95% CI 15 to 30) (about 3 UK units) less than participants who received no or minimal interventions at end of follow up (moderate-quality evidence).Fifteen studies (16 comparisons, 10,862 participants) demonstrated that participants who engaged with digital interventions had less than one drinking day per month fewer than no intervention controls (moderate-quality evidence), 15 studies (3587 participants) showed about one binge drinking session less per month in the intervention group compared to no intervention controls (moderate-quality evidence), and in 15 studies (9791 participants) intervention participants drank one unit per occasion less than no intervention control participants (moderate-quality evidence).Only five small studies (390 participants) compared digital and face-to-face interventions. There was no difference in alcohol consumption at end of follow up (MD 0.52 g/week, 95% CI -24.59 to 25.63; low-quality evidence). Thus, digital alcohol interventions produced broadly similar outcomes in these studies. No studies reported whether any adverse effects resulted from the interventions.A median of nine BCTs were used in experimental arms (range = 1 to 22). 'B' is an estimate of effect (MD in quantity of drinking, expressed in g/week) per unit increase in the BCT, and is a way to report whether individual BCTs are linked to the effect of the intervention. The BCTs of goal setting (B -43.94, 95% CI -78.59 to -9.30), problem solving (B -48.03, 95% CI -77.79 to -18.27), information about antecedents (B -74.20, 95% CI -117.72 to -30.68), behaviour substitution (B -123.71, 95% CI -184.63 to -62.80) and credible source (B -39.89, 95% CI -72.66 to -7.11) were significantly associated with reduced alcohol consumption in unadjusted models. In a multivariable model that included BCTs with B > 23 in the unadjusted model, the BCTs of behaviour substitution (B -95.12, 95% CI -162.90 to -27.34), problem solving (B -45.92, 95% CI -90.97 to -0.87), and credible source (B -32.09, 95% CI -60.64 to -3.55) were associated with reduced alcohol consumption.The most frequently mentioned theories or models in the included studies were Motivational Interviewing Theory (7/20), Transtheoretical Model (6/20) and Social Norms Theory (6/20). Over half of the interventions (n = 21, 51%) made no mention of theory. Only two studies used theory to select participants or tailor the intervention. There was no evidence of an association between reporting theory use and intervention effectiveness.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is moderate-quality evidence that digital interventions may lower alcohol consumption, with an average reduction of up to three (UK) standard drinks per week compared to control participants. Substantial heterogeneity and risk of performance and publication bias may mean the reduction was lower. Low-quality evidence from fewer studies suggested there may be little or no difference in impact on alcohol consumption between digital and face-to-face interventions.The BCTs of behaviour substitution, problem solving and credible source were associated with the effectiveness of digital interventions to reduce alcohol consumption and warrant further investigation in an experimental context.Reporting of theory use was very limited and often unclear when present. Over half of the interventions made no reference to any theories. Limited reporting of theory use was unrelated to heterogeneity in intervention effectiveness.
过度饮酒会显著导致身体和心理疾病、伤害和死亡,并在所有年龄组中造成广泛的社会危害。一种经证实的减少过度饮酒水平的策略是在初级保健机构提供基于简短对话的干预措施,但最近的技术创新使人们能够通过计算机、移动设备或智能手机直接与旨在解决酒精消费问题的数字干预措施进行互动。
评估数字干预措施在减少社区居民危险和有害饮酒、与酒精相关的问题或两者方面的有效性和成本效益,具体包括:(i)数字干预措施是否比无干预(或最小投入)对照更有效和更具成本效益?(ii)数字干预措施是否至少与面对面简短酒精干预措施同样有效?(iii)此类干预措施有效的组成部分行为改变技术(BCTs)及其作用机制是什么?(iv)在干预措施的开发和/或评估中使用了哪些理论或模型?次要目标是:(i)评估数字干预措施针对参加健康、社会护理、教育或其他社区环境的参与者与通过互联网或移动电话平台远程提供干预措施的试验之间的结果是否存在差异;(ii)根据其交付方式(如功能特征)指定干预措施,并评估交付方式对结果的影响。
我们检索了CENTRAL、MEDLINE、PsycINFO、CINAHL、ERIC、HTA和Web of Knowledge数据库;ClinicalTrials.com和WHO ICTRP试验注册库以及相关网站至2017年4月。我们还检查了纳入试验和相关系统评价的参考文献列表。
我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCTs),这些试验评估了数字干预措施与无干预或面对面干预措施相比在减少社区居民危险或有害饮酒方面的有效性,并报告了酒精消费的测量值。
我们使用了Cochrane协作网期望的标准方法程序。
我们纳入了57项研究,共随机分配了34390名参与者。主要的偏倚来源是失访和参与者盲法(分别占研究的36%和21%,高偏倚风险)。41项研究(42次比较,19241名参与者)为主要荟萃分析提供了数据,结果表明,在随访结束时,使用数字干预措施的参与者每周饮酒量比未接受干预或接受最小干预的参与者少约23克酒精(95%CI 15至30)(约3个英国单位)(中等质量证据)。15项研究(16次比较,10862名参与者)表明,参与数字干预措施的参与者每月饮酒天数比无干预对照组少不到1天(中等质量证据),15项研究(3587名参与者)显示,与无干预对照组相比,干预组每月的暴饮次数约少1次(中等质量证据),在15项研究(9791名参与者)中,干预组参与者每次饮酒量比无干预对照组少1个单位(中等质量证据)。只有5项小型研究(390名参与者)比较了数字干预措施和面对面干预措施。随访结束时酒精消费量无差异(MD 0.52克/周,95%CI -24.59至25.63;低质量证据)。因此,在这些研究中,数字酒精干预措施产生了大致相似的结果。没有研究报告干预措施是否导致任何不良反应。
实验组中使用的BCTs中位数为9个(范围=1至22)。“B”是指BCT每增加一个单位的效果估计值(饮酒量的MD,以克/周表示),是一种报告单个BCT是否与干预效果相关的方式。在未调整模型中,目标设定(B -43.94,95%CI -78.59至-9.30)、问题解决(B -48.03,95%CI -77.79至-18.27)、前因信息(B -74.20,95%CI -117.72至-30.68)、行为替代(B -123.71,CI -184.63至-62.80)和可靠来源(B -39.89,95%CI -72.66至-7.11)与减少酒精消费显著相关。在一个多变量模型中,该模型纳入了未调整模型中B>23的BCTs,行为替代(B -95.12,95%CI -162.90至-27.34)、问题解决(B -45.92,95%CI -90.97至-0.87)和可靠来源(B -32.09,95%CI -60.64至-3.55)与减少酒精消费相关。
纳入研究中最常提及的理论或模型是动机访谈理论(7/20)、跨理论模型(6/20)和社会规范理论(6/20)。超过一半的干预措施(n = 21,51%)未提及理论。只有两项研究使用理论来选择参与者或调整干预措施。没有证据表明报告理论的使用与干预效果之间存在关联。
有中等质量的证据表明,数字干预措施可能会降低酒精消费量,与对照组参与者相比,平均每周最多可减少3杯(英国)标准饮品。大量的异质性以及实施和发表偏倚的风险可能意味着减少量更低。来自较少研究的低质量证据表明,数字干预措施和面对面干预措施对酒精消费的影响可能几乎没有差异或没有差异。
行为替代、问题解决和可靠来源的BCTs与数字干预措施减少酒精消费的有效性相关,值得在实验环境中进一步研究。
理论使用的报告非常有限,而且存在时往往不清楚。超过一半的干预措施未提及任何理论。理论使用报告有限与干预效果的异质性无关。