Cunningham John A, Schell Christina, Bertholet Nicolas, Wardell Jeffrey D, Quilty Lena C, Agic Branka, Godinho Alexandra
National Addiction Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, Kings College London, London, United Kingdom.
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Canada.
Internet Interv. 2021 Nov 14;26:100484. doi: 10.1016/j.invent.2021.100484. eCollection 2021 Dec.
Given the widespread use of cannabis, and the concomitant risks associated with the drug, there is a need to increase the availability of interventions designed to reduce risky cannabis use. One promising intervention in the addictions employs personalized normative feedback to motivate change.
A two-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) was conducted in which participants who used cannabis in a risky fashion were randomly assigned to one of two groups - those who received an online personalized feedback report in addition to educational materials about risky cannabis use and those who just received the online educational materials. Follow-up assessment occurred at three- and six-months post-randomization. Outcome variables included: number of days cannabis was used in the past 30, risky cannabis use (ASSIST score of four or more), and participant estimates of the proportion of cannabis users among those of the same age and gender.
A total of 744 participants with risky cannabis use were recruited for the trial using online advertisements. There were no significant differences between intervention and educational materials only groups at three- and six-month follow-ups for the outcome variables, number of days used cannabis in the last 30 ( = 0.927) and proportion of participants engaging in risky cannabis use ( = 0.557). At three and six month follow-ups, participants who received the feedback intervention were more likely than those in the educational materials group to estimate that a larger proportion of people their age and gender did not use cannabis in the last year ( = 0.028).
While there was some evidence that the personalized feedback intervention modified normative perceptions about cannabis use, there did not appear to be support for the prediction that the intervention reduced cannabis consumption.
鉴于大麻的广泛使用及其伴随的风险,有必要增加旨在减少危险大麻使用的干预措施。成瘾领域一种有前景的干预措施是利用个性化规范反馈来促进行为改变。
进行了一项双臂随机对照试验(RCT),将有危险大麻使用行为的参与者随机分为两组,一组除了收到关于危险大麻使用的教育材料外,还收到一份在线个性化反馈报告,另一组只收到在线教育材料。在随机分组后的三个月和六个月进行随访评估。结果变量包括:过去30天使用大麻的天数、危险大麻使用情况(ASSIST评分4分及以上),以及参与者对同年龄和性别的大麻使用者比例的估计。
通过在线广告招募了744名有危险大麻使用行为的参与者参与试验。在三个月和六个月的随访中,干预组和仅接受教育材料组在结果变量上没有显著差异,即过去30天使用大麻的天数(P = 0.927)和有危险大麻使用行为的参与者比例(P = 0.557)。在三个月和六个月的随访中,接受反馈干预的参与者比仅接受教育材料组的参与者更有可能估计在去年,同年龄和性别的人中不使用大麻的比例更高(P = 0.028)。
虽然有一些证据表明个性化反馈干预改变了对大麻使用的规范认知,但似乎没有支持该干预会减少大麻消费的预测。