Suffoletto Brian, Chung Tammy, Muench Frederick, Monti Peter, Clark Duncan B
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States.
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth. 2018 Feb 16;6(2):e35. doi: 10.2196/mhealth.8530.
Stand-alone text message-based interventions can reduce binge drinking episodes (≥4 drinks for women and ≥5 drinks for men) among nontreatment-seeking young adults, but may not be optimized. Adaptive text message support could enhance effectiveness by assisting context-specific goal setting and striving, but it remains unknown how to best integrate it into text message interventions.
The objective of this study was to evaluate young adults' engagement with a text message intervention, Texting to Reduce Alcohol Consumption 2 (TRAC2), which focuses on reducing weekend alcohol consumption. TRAC2 incorporated preweekend drinking-limit goal-commitment ecological momentary assessments (EMA) tailored to past 2-week alcohol consumption, intraweekend goal reminders, self-efficacy EMA with support tailored to goal confidence, and maximum weekend alcohol consumption EMA with drinking limit goal feedback.
We enrolled 38 nontreatment-seeking young adults (aged 18 to 25 years) who screened positive for hazardous drinking in an urban emergency department. Following a 2-week text message assessment-only run-in, subjects were given the opportunity to enroll in 4-week intervention blocks. We examined patterns of EMA responses and voluntary re-enrollment. We then examined how goal commitment and goal self-efficacy related to event-level alcohol consumption. Finally, we examined the association of length of TRAC2 exposure with alcohol-related outcomes from baseline to 3-month follow-up.
Among a diverse sample of young adults (56% [28/50] female, 54% [27/50] black, 32% [12/50] college enrolled), response rates to EMA queries were, on average, 82% for the first 4-week intervention block, 75% for the second 4-week block, and 73% for the third 4-week block. In the first 4 weeks of the intervention, drinking limit goal commitment was made 68/71 times it was prompted (96%). The percentage of subjects being prompted to commit to a drinking limit goal above the binge threshold was 52% (15/29) in week 1 and decreased to 0% (0/15) by week 4. Subjects met their goal 130/146 of the times a goal was committed to (89.0%). There were lower rates of goal success when subjects reported lower confidence (score <4) in meeting the goal (76% [32/42 weekends]) compared with that when subjects reported high confidence (98% [56/57 weekends]; P=.001). There were reductions in alcohol consumption from baseline to 3 months, but reductions were not different by length of intervention exposure.
Preliminary evidence suggests that nontreatment-seeking young adults will engage with a text message intervention incorporating self-regulation support features, resulting in high rates of weekend drinking limit goal commitment and goal success.
基于短信的独立干预措施可减少未寻求治疗的年轻成年人的暴饮次数(女性≥4杯,男性≥5杯),但可能未得到优化。适应性短信支持可通过协助设定和努力实现特定情境目标来提高有效性,但如何将其最佳地整合到短信干预中仍不明确。
本研究的目的是评估年轻成年人对短信干预措施“短信减少酒精消费2(TRAC2)”的参与度,该干预措施侧重于减少周末酒精消费。TRAC2纳入了根据过去2周酒精消费情况量身定制的周末前饮酒限量目标承诺生态瞬时评估(EMA)、周末内目标提醒、根据目标信心量身定制支持的自我效能EMA以及带有饮酒限量目标反馈的最大周末酒精消费EMA。
我们招募了38名在城市急诊科筛查出有害饮酒呈阳性的未寻求治疗的年轻成年人(年龄在18至25岁之间)。在进行为期2周的仅短信评估的导入期后,受试者有机会参加为期4周的干预阶段。我们检查了EMA回复模式和自愿重新参与情况。然后,我们研究了目标承诺和目标自我效能与事件层面酒精消费的关系。最后,我们检查了从基线到3个月随访期间TRAC2暴露时长与酒精相关结果的关联。
在一个多样化的年轻成年人样本中(56%[28/50]为女性,54%[27/50]为黑人,32%[12/50]为在校大学生),对EMA查询的回复率在前4周干预阶段平均为82%,第二个4周阶段为75%,第三个4周阶段为73%。在干预的前4周,饮酒限量目标承诺在被提示的68/71次中做出(96%)。在第1周,被提示承诺达到高于暴饮阈值的饮酒限量目标的受试者百分比为52%(15/29),到第4周降至0%(0/15)。受试者在130/146次承诺目标时达到了目标(89.0%)。当受试者报告对实现目标的信心较低(得分<4)时,目标成功率较低(76%[32/42个周末]),而当受试者报告信心较高时(98%[56/57个周末];P = 0.001)。从基线到3个月,酒精消费有所减少,但减少幅度在不同干预暴露时长之间没有差异。
初步证据表明,未寻求治疗的年轻成年人会参与包含自我调节支持功能的短信干预,从而实现较高的周末饮酒限量目标承诺率和目标成功率。