Faculty of Health, School of Psychology, Deakin University, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood, Victoria, 3125, Australia.
The Cairnmillar Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
Int J Behav Med. 2019 Aug;26(4):401-414. doi: 10.1007/s12529-019-09789-0.
Smartphone-based interventions are a potentially effective way to minimize alcohol-related harm in young adult, non-dependent drinkers. This pilot study is the first to evaluate the benefits and feasibility of a personalized alcohol harm-minimization intervention delivered via smartphones.
Within a single-blind, randomized controlled design, 45 young adults were randomly assigned to either the intervention app (n = 25; 18 females; M = 21.36 years, SD = 4.15 years) or the control app (n = 20; 18 females; M = 22.75; SD = 4.41). The two primary outcomes were frequency of risky drinking and drinking-related harms, and the secondary outcome was frequency of protective behavioral strategies (PBS) use. All outcomes were measured at baseline and immediately post-intervention. Using the Enlight framework [1], usability was evaluated via structured one-on-one phone interviews with a subgroup of six participants from the intervention group (3 females; M = 19.5 years, SD = 1.64).
There was no significant reduction in the primary outcomes from baseline to post-intervention across the groups. For the secondary outcome, the application of PBS within drinking contexts increased at follow-up for those in the intervention group but not for control participants. End-users rated the app as highly usable but had some concerns with repetition of the app-recommended strategies.
This intervention, designed to reduce risky drinking behaviors among young adults, was rated as highly usable and was shown to increase the application of harm minimization strategies within drinking contexts. While the intervention and its delivery show promise, it did not appear to mitigate risky drinking behaviors. Implications of this research and future directions are discussed.
This trial is registered at the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry: BLINDED.
基于智能手机的干预措施可能是减少年轻非依赖饮酒者酒精相关伤害的有效方法。这项初步研究首次评估了通过智能手机提供个性化酒精伤害最小化干预的益处和可行性。
在单盲、随机对照设计中,45 名年轻成年人被随机分配到干预应用程序组(n=25;18 名女性;M=21.36 岁,SD=4.15 岁)或对照组(n=20;18 名女性;M=22.75 岁,SD=4.41 岁)。两个主要结局是饮酒频率和与饮酒相关的伤害,次要结局是使用保护性行为策略(PBS)的频率。所有结局均在基线和干预后立即进行测量。使用 Enlight 框架[1],通过对干预组六名参与者(3 名女性;M=19.5 岁,SD=1.64)进行的一对一电话访谈评估了可用性。
从基线到干预后,两组的主要结局均无显著降低。对于次要结局,在干预组中,在饮酒情境下应用 PBS 在随访时增加,但对照组参与者没有增加。最终用户认为该应用程序非常好用,但对应用程序推荐策略的重复存在一些担忧。
本研究旨在减少年轻成年人的危险饮酒行为,该干预措施被评为高度可用,并且显示出在饮酒情境下增加伤害最小化策略的应用。虽然干预措施及其应用具有潜力,但它似乎并没有减轻危险饮酒行为。讨论了这项研究的意义和未来方向。
这项试验在澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验注册中心注册:BLINDED。