Alcohol assessment and feedback by email for university students: main findings from a randomised controlled trial
- PMID: 24072758
- PMCID: PMC3814613
- DOI: 10.1192/bjp.bp.113.128660
Alcohol assessment and feedback by email for university students: main findings from a randomised controlled trial
Abstract
Background: Brief interventions can be efficacious in changing alcohol consumption and increasingly take advantage of the internet to reach high-risk populations such as students.
Aims: To evaluate the effectiveness of a brief online intervention, controlling for the possible effects of the research process.
Method: A three-arm parallel groups design was used to explore the magnitude of the feedback and assessment component effects. The three groups were: alcohol assessment and feedback (group 1); alcohol assessment only without feedback (group 2); and no contact, and thus neither assessment nor feedback (group 3). Outcomes were evaluated after 3 months via an invitation to participate in a brief cross-sectional lifestyle survey. The study was undertaken in two universities randomising the email addresses of all 14 910 students (the AMADEUS-1 study, trial registration: ISRCTN28328154).
Results: Overall, 52% (n = 7809) of students completed follow-up, with small differences in attrition between the three groups. For each of the two primary outcomes, there was one statistically significant difference between groups, with group 1 having 3.7% fewer risky drinkers at follow-up than group 3 (P = 0.006) and group 2 scoring 0.16 points lower than group 3 on the three alcohol consumption questions from the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT-C) (P = 0.039).
Conclusions: This study provides some evidence of population-level benefit attained through intervening with individual students.
Conflict of interest statement
P.B. and M.B. own a company that has developed the online intervention used in this study and that develops and distributes computerised lifestyle interventions.
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- Babor T, Caetano R, Casswell S, Edwards G, Giesbrecht N, Graham K, et al. Alcohol, No Ordinary Commodity: Research & Public Policy. Oxford University Press, 2010.
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