Tinner Laura Elizabeth, Kaner Eileen, Garnett Claire, Mitchell Siobhan, Hickman Matthew, Campbell Rona, MacArthur Georgina
Department of Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Institute of Health and Society, Newcastle University, Newcastle, United Kingdom.
JMIR Pediatr Parent. 2020 Dec 15;3(2):e19749. doi: 10.2196/19749.
In the United Kingdom, despite some downward trends in alcohol use among young people, over one-fifth of young people reported excessive alcohol use in the past month, which is associated with short- and long-term harm to health. Digital interventions to reduce alcohol use, such as websites, among young people present an appealing and cost-effective mode of intervention that can be integrated into the education system. However, relatively few school-based digital alcohol-focused interventions have been developed and evaluated for young people in the United Kingdom.
This study aims to develop a novel web-based intervention, Rethink Alcohol, to prevent and reduce excessive alcohol use and related harm among young people aged between 14 and 15 years, and explore the views of young people, teachers, and youth workers in relation to the content, design, and usability of the intervention.
Intervention development followed the person-based approach, using theories of social norms and social influence. Qualitative "Think-Aloud" interviews, either one-to-one or paired, were conducted while participants perused and worked through the web-based intervention, talking aloud. Participants included 20 young people (12 female, 8 male), 5 youth workers (4 female, 1 male), 3 teachers (2 male, 1 female), and 1 (male) clinical professional, recruited via youth groups and professional networks. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed thematically.
The prototype web-based intervention included normative feedback, information, a quiz, interactive activities, and scenarios. On a rating scale of impressions from poor (1) to excellent (5), participants gave an average score of 3.6/5. A total of 5 themes were identified: content, credibility of the website, making the website easy to understand, design and navigation, and suitability for the audience. These themes reflected views that the content was interesting, credible, informative, and embodied a neutral and nonjudgmental tone, but stronger messaging was needed regarding social pressures and short-term risks regarding safety and risk behavior alongside clarity around pathways of risk; credibility and trustworthiness of information were critical features, determined in part, by the professionalism of design and referencing of sources of information provided; and messages should be succinct and come to life through design and interactive features.
Together, the data illustrated the importance and challenge of communicating nuanced alcohol-focused public health messages to young people in concise, clear, nonjudgmental, and appealing ways. Young people report interest in clear, credible, neutral, and interactive messages regarding social pressures and short-term risks of alcohol use via a web-based intervention. There is scope for optimization and feasibility testing of the Rethink Alcohol intervention.
在英国,尽管年轻人的酒精使用量有一些下降趋势,但仍有超过五分之一的年轻人报告在过去一个月中过度饮酒,这与短期和长期的健康危害相关。针对年轻人减少酒精使用的数字干预措施,如网站,是一种有吸引力且具有成本效益的干预方式,可以融入教育系统。然而,在英国,针对年轻人的以酒精为重点的校内数字干预措施相对较少得到开发和评估。
本研究旨在开发一种新型的基于网络的干预措施“重新思考酒精”,以预防和减少14至15岁年轻人的过度饮酒及相关危害,并探讨年轻人、教师和青年工作者对该干预措施的内容、设计和可用性的看法。
干预措施的开发采用以人为本的方法,运用社会规范和社会影响理论。在参与者浏览和使用基于网络的干预措施时,进行一对一或成对的定性“出声思考”访谈,让他们边做边大声说出想法。参与者包括通过青年团体和专业网络招募的20名年轻人(12名女性,8名男性)、5名青年工作者(4名女性,1名男性)、3名教师(2名男性,1名女性)和1名(男性)临床专业人员。访谈进行录音,逐字转录,并进行主题分析。
基于网络的干预措施原型包括规范性反馈、信息、测验、互动活动和情景。在从差(1)到优(5)的印象评分量表上,参与者给出的平均评分为3.6/5。共确定了5个主题:内容、网站的可信度、使网站易于理解、设计与导航以及对受众的适用性。这些主题反映出以下观点:内容有趣、可信、信息丰富,且体现出中立和无偏见的语气,但需要在社会压力以及安全和风险行为的短期风险方面传递更强的信息,同时要明确风险途径;信息的可信度和可靠性是关键特征,部分取决于设计的专业性和所提供信息来源的引用;信息应简洁,并通过设计和互动功能变得生动起来。
总体而言,数据表明以简洁、清晰、无偏见且有吸引力的方式向年轻人传达细微的酒精相关公共卫生信息的重要性和挑战性。年轻人表示对通过基于网络的干预措施获得关于酒精使用的社会压力和短期风险的清晰、可信、中立和互动信息感兴趣。“重新思考酒精”干预措施有优化和可行性测试的空间。