Background
Binge
drinking is associated with numerous negative consequences. The prevalence and
intensity of binge drinking is highest among young adults. This randomized
trial tested the efficacy of a 12-week interactive text message intervention to
reduce binge drinking up to 6 months after intervention completion among young
adults.
Methods and Findings
Young
adult participants (18–25 y; n = 765) drinking above the low-risk limits
(AUDIT-C score >3/4 women/men), but not seeking alcohol treatment, were
enrolled from 4 Emergency Departments (EDs) in Pittsburgh, PA. Participants
were randomized to one of three conditions in a 2:1:1 allocation ratio: SMS
Assessments + Feedback (SA+F), SMS Assessments (SA), or control. For 12 weeks,
SA+F participants received texts each Thursday querying weekend drinking plans
and prompting drinking limit goal commitment and each Sunday querying weekend
drinking quantity. SA+F participants received tailored feedback based on their
text responses. To contrast the effects of SA+F with self-monitoring, SA
participants received texts on Sundays querying drinking quantity, but did not
receive alcohol-specific feedback. The control arm received standard care.
Follow-up outcome data collected through web-based surveys were provided by 78%
of participants at 3- months, 63% at 6-months and 55% at 9-months. Multiple
imputation-derived, intent-to-treat models were used for primary analysis. At
9-months, participants in the SA+F group reported greater reductions in the
number of binge drinking days than participants in the control group, lower binge drinking prevalence, less drinks per drinking day and lower alcohol-related injury prevalence. Participants in the SA group did not reduce
drinking or alcohol-related injury relative to controls. Findings were similar
using complete case analyses.
Conclusions
An interactive text-message intervention was more
effective than self-monitoring or controls in reducing alcohol consumption and
alcohol-related injury prevalence up to 6 months after intervention completion.
These findings, if replicated, suggest a scalable approach to help achieve
sustained reductions in binge drinking and accompanying injuries among young
adults.
Below: Self-reported alcohol consumption and alcohol-related injuries at 3-, 6- and 9-months follow-ups
Full article at: http://goo.gl/AKZTno
By:
Brian Suffoletto, Jeffrey Kristan
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Pittsburgh
School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Tammy Chung, Duncan B. Clark
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Kwonho Jeong, Anthony Fabio
Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public
Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of
America
Peter Monti
Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, Brown University,
Providence, Rhode Island, United States of America
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
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