De Leon Ardhys N, Dvorak Robert D, Smallman Rachel, Arthur Kianna, Piercey Cianna
Department of Psychology, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida, USA.
Department of Psychology, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, USA.
Br J Health Psychol. 2022 Feb;27(1):159-178. doi: 10.1111/bjhp.12535. Epub 2021 Jun 2.
Despite numerous drinking interventions, alcohol use among college students remains a significant problem. Typically activated after negative events, counterfactual thinking is a cognitive process that contrasts reality with an imagined better alternative. As a result, counterfactual thinking highlights potential causal links between problematic behaviours and negative outcomes, which can strengthen intentions to change behaviour. Recent research has found that modifying behavioural intentions to engage in protective behavioural strategies (PBS) has led to increased PBS use and reduced alcohol outcomes. The current study evaluated counterfactual thinking as a way to increase PBS use intentions.
Intervention US study with college student drinkers.
A sample of college students (n = 466) completed a web-based assessment of demographics, drinking, alcohol consequences, and PBS use. Those who endorsed an adverse drinking event were randomly assigned to an intervention condition (Control, Negative event only, Negative event with description, or Negative event with counterfactual). Following the intervention, participants reported intentions to engage in each PBS subtype over the next week.
Relative to control, the counterfactual condition resulted in greater PBS use intentions across all subtypes. Neither the negative event only nor the negative event with description resulted in higher PBS use intentions, relative to control. Importantly, the control group did not report whether they experienced a negative event; thus, we cannot definitively determine the effect this may have on the data.
This study provides a new theory-driven avenue for alcohol use interventions utilizing counterfactual thinking to enhance safe drinking intentions.
尽管有众多饮酒干预措施,但大学生饮酒仍是一个重大问题。反事实思维是一种认知过程,通常在负面事件发生后被激活,它将现实与想象中的更好选择进行对比。因此,反事实思维突出了问题行为与负面结果之间潜在的因果联系,这可以强化改变行为的意图。最近的研究发现,改变参与保护性行为策略(PBS)的行为意图会导致PBS使用增加和饮酒相关结果减少。本研究评估了反事实思维作为增加PBS使用意图的一种方式。
针对大学生饮酒者的美国干预性研究。
一组大学生(n = 466)完成了一项基于网络的人口统计学、饮酒情况、饮酒后果和PBS使用情况的评估。那些认可发生过不良饮酒事件的学生被随机分配到一种干预条件下(对照组、仅负面事件组、有描述的负面事件组或有反事实思维的负面事件组)。干预后,参与者报告了在接下来一周内参与每种PBS亚型的意图。
相对于对照组,反事实思维条件下所有亚型的PBS使用意图都更高。仅负面事件组和有描述的负面事件组相对于对照组而言,都没有产生更高的PBS使用意图。重要的是,对照组没有报告他们是否经历过负面事件;因此,我们无法确切确定这可能对数据产生的影响。
本研究为饮酒干预提供了一条新的理论驱动途径,即利用反事实思维来增强安全饮酒意图。