Wayne State University, Department of Psychology, United States.
Meridian Health Services, United States.
Addict Behav. 2019 Mar;90:151-157. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2018.10.028. Epub 2018 Oct 29.
The goal of the present study was to test the drink and harm reduction effects of a novel educational commitment (EC) module as a complement to a standard brief MI protocol (i.e., the Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention for College Students; BASICS, Dimeff, Baer, Kivlahan, & Marlatt, 1999).
Using a randomized trial design, 180 university students were assigned to one of three conditions: Information, BASICS, or BASICS+EC. Participants completed an alcohol consumption interview and measures of alcohol-related problems, partying decision-making, subjective student role investment, and self-control-related traits at baseline and at two- and nine-month follow-ups.
Linear models showed significant condition effects for two-month and nine-month drink quantity, but not for alcohol problems/consequences. Secondary outcome analyses showed significant condition effects for two-month high-risk high-reward partying decision-making and nine-month conscientiousness. Somewhat larger-sized decreases in consumption were observed at two months for the BASICS+EC condition compared to the BASICS condition, although these differences were not present at nine months.
The differential efficacy between the BASICS and BASICS+EC conditions compared to the Information condition reinforces the utility of in-person feedback modalities as more intensive indicated prevention strategies for at-risk college drinkers. The limited differential efficacy for BASICS+EC compared to BASICS suggests a brief MI module for the academic/vocational aspects of the student role is not associated with greater long-term drink and harm reduction. Future research should examine more intensive educational commitment modalities, the utility of on-going academic goal and action feedback, and mechanisms of differential efficacy across intervention groups.
本研究旨在测试一种新型教育承诺(EC)模块作为标准简短干预方法(即Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention for College Students;BASICS,Dimeff,Baer,Kivlahan,& Marlatt,1999)补充的饮酒和减少伤害的效果。
采用随机试验设计,将 180 名大学生分配到以下三种条件之一:信息组、BASICS 组或 BASICS+EC 组。参与者在基线以及两个月和九个月随访时完成饮酒访谈以及与酒精相关问题、聚会决策、主观学生角色投入和自我控制相关特质的测量。
线性模型显示,两个月和九个月的饮酒量存在显著的条件效应,但对酒精问题/后果没有影响。次要结果分析显示,两个月的高风险高回报聚会决策和九个月的尽责性存在显著的条件效应。与 BASICS 组相比,BASICS+EC 组在两个月时的饮酒量有所减少,尽管在九个月时没有差异。
与信息组相比,BASICS 和 BASICS+EC 组的效果差异增强了面对面反馈模式作为针对有风险的大学生饮酒者的更强化的有针对性预防策略的效用。与 BASICS 相比,BASICS+EC 的效果差异有限,表明针对学生角色的学术/职业方面的简短 MI 模块与减少长期饮酒和伤害无关。未来的研究应检验更强化的教育承诺模式、对学术目标和行动反馈的效用,以及干预组之间差异效果的机制。