Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States.
Division of Adolescent/Young Adult Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2021 Sep 30;23(9):e26418. doi: 10.2196/26418.
College environments promote high-volume or binge alcohol consumption among youth, which may be especially harmful to those with type 1 diabetes (T1D). Little is known about the acceptability and effectiveness of interventions targeting reduced alcohol use by college students with T1D, and it is unclear whether intervention framing (specifically, the narrator of intervention messages) matters with respect to affecting behavior change. Interventions promoted by peer educators may be highly relatable and socially persuasive, whereas those delivered by clinical providers may be highly credible and motivating.
The aim of this study is to determine the acceptability and impacts of an alcohol use psychoeducational intervention delivered asynchronously through web-based channels to college students with T1D. The secondary aim is to compare the impacts of two competing versions of the intervention that differed by narrator (peer vs clinician).
We recruited 138 college students (aged 17-25 years) with T1D through web-based channels and delivered a brief intervention to participants randomly assigned to 1 of 2 versions that differed only with respect to the audiovisually recorded narrator. We assessed the impacts of the exposure to the intervention overall and by group, comparing the levels of alcohol- and diabetes-related knowledge, perceptions, and use among baseline, immediately after the intervention, and 2 weeks after intervention delivery.
Of the 138 enrolled participants, 122 (88.4%) completed all follow-up assessments; the participants were predominantly women (98/122, 80.3%), were White non-Hispanic (102/122, 83.6%), and had consumed alcohol in the past year (101/122, 82.8%). Both arms saw significant postintervention gains in the knowledge of alcohol's impacts on diabetes-related factors, health-protecting attitudes toward drinking, and concerns about drinking. All participants reported significant decreases in binge drinking 2 weeks after the intervention (21.3%; odds ratio 0.48, 95% CI 0.31-0.75) compared with the 2 weeks before the intervention (43/122, 35.2%). Changes in binge drinking after the intervention were affected by changes in concerns about alcohol use and T1D. Those who viewed the provider narrator were significantly more likely to rate their narrator as knowledgeable and trustworthy; there were no other significant differences in intervention effects by the narrator.
The intervention model was highly acceptable and effective at reducing self-reported binge drinking at follow-up, offering the potential for broad dissemination and reach given the web-based format and contactless, on-demand content. Both intervention narrators increased knowledge, improved health-protecting attitudes, and increased concerns regarding alcohol use. The participants' perceptions of expertise and credibility differed by narrator.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02883829; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02883829.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR2-10.1177/1932296819839503.
大学校园环境会促使年轻人大量或狂饮酒精,这对 1 型糖尿病(T1D)患者可能尤其有害。针对 T1D 大学生减少饮酒量的干预措施的接受程度和效果知之甚少,而且尚不清楚干预措施的框架(特别是干预信息的讲述者)是否会影响行为改变。由同伴教育者推广的干预措施可能非常相关和具有社会说服力,而由临床医生提供的干预措施可能非常可信且具有激励性。
本研究旨在确定通过基于网络的渠道异步向 T1D 大学生提供酒精使用心理教育干预的接受程度和影响。次要目的是比较两种不同讲述者(同伴与临床医生)的干预措施版本的影响。
我们通过网络渠道招募了 138 名年龄在 17-25 岁之间的 T1D 大学生,并将一项简短的干预措施随机分配给参与者,他们分为 2 个版本,唯一的区别在于视听录制的讲述者。我们评估了干预措施的总体和分组影响,比较了基线、干预后立即和干预后 2 周期间的酒精和糖尿病相关知识、认知和使用水平。
在 138 名入组的参与者中,有 122 名(88.4%)完成了所有随访评估;参与者主要为女性(98/122,80.3%),为白种非西班牙裔(102/122,83.6%),且在过去一年中饮酒(101/122,82.8%)。两个组在干预后均显著提高了对酒精对糖尿病相关因素影响的认知、对饮酒具有保护健康的态度和对饮酒的担忧。所有参与者在干预后两周内报告了 binge drinking 的显著减少(21.3%;比值比 0.48,95%CI 0.31-0.75),与干预前两周相比(43/122,35.2%)。干预后 binge drinking 的变化受到对饮酒和 T1D 的担忧变化的影响。那些观看了提供者讲述者的人更有可能对他们的讲述者评价为知识渊博和值得信赖;讲述者没有对干预效果产生其他显著影响。
该干预模式在减少随访期间的自我报告 binge drinking 方面非常有效,由于基于网络的格式和非接触式、按需内容,具有广泛传播和覆盖的潜力。两种干预讲述者都增加了知识,改善了保护健康的态度,并增加了对饮酒的担忧。参与者对专业知识和可信度的看法因讲述者而异。