BACKGROUND: Matriculation from high school to college is typified by an increase in alcohol use and related harm for many students. Therefore, this transition period is an ideal time for preventive interventions to target alcohol use and related problems. PURPOSE: The purpose of this report is to describe the design and methods used in the Transitions Project, a randomized controlled trial of two interventions designed to prevent and reduce heavy episodic drinking and alcohol-related negative consequences among incoming college students. METHODS: This study used a 2 × 2 factorial design to investigate the effects of a two-session brief motivational intervention delivered to students and a handbook-based parent intervention. Interventions were administered to students and parents. Follow-up assessment took place at 10- and 22-months post-baseline. RESULTS: The Transitions Project successfully recruited and retained participants across a major transition period (i.e., entering college), administered and compared two distinct but complementary interventions, and collected and analyzed highly skewed data. The application of a factorial design and two-part latent growth curve modeling allowed us to examine main and interactive intervention effects in terms of both initiation and growth in heavy drinking and alcohol-related problems. LIMITATIONS: While we conducted successful tests of our primary and secondary study hypotheses over a lengthy follow-up period, our study design did not permit full interpretation of null findings. We suggest that researchers carefully consider assessment timing, tests of assessment reactivity, and ensure objective tests of intervention efficacy when conducting clinical trials of motivational interventions. CONCLUSIONS: The lessons we learned while conducting this trial have the potential to assist other researchers designing and conducting future preventive interventions targeting parents and college students. The data analytic procedures presented can also help guide trials that plan to analyze zero-inflated non-normal outcome data.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Matriculation from high school to college is typified by an increase in alcohol use and related harm for many students. Therefore, this transition period is an ideal time for preventive interventions to target alcohol use and related problems. PURPOSE: The purpose of this report is to describe the design and methods used in the Transitions Project, a randomized controlled trial of two interventions designed to prevent and reduce heavy episodic drinking and alcohol-related negative consequences among incoming college students. METHODS: This study used a 2 × 2 factorial design to investigate the effects of a two-session brief motivational intervention delivered to students and a handbook-based parent intervention. Interventions were administered to students and parents. Follow-up assessment took place at 10- and 22-months post-baseline. RESULTS: The Transitions Project successfully recruited and retained participants across a major transition period (i.e., entering college), administered and compared two distinct but complementary interventions, and collected and analyzed highly skewed data. The application of a factorial design and two-part latent growth curve modeling allowed us to examine main and interactive intervention effects in terms of both initiation and growth in heavy drinking and alcohol-related problems. LIMITATIONS: While we conducted successful tests of our primary and secondary study hypotheses over a lengthy follow-up period, our study design did not permit full interpretation of null findings. We suggest that researchers carefully consider assessment timing, tests of assessment reactivity, and ensure objective tests of intervention efficacy when conducting clinical trials of motivational interventions. CONCLUSIONS: The lessons we learned while conducting this trial have the potential to assist other researchers designing and conducting future preventive interventions targeting parents and college students. The data analytic procedures presented can also help guide trials that plan to analyze zero-inflated non-normal outcome data.
The Transitions Project was a randomized controlled trial designed to examine the
unique and combined effects of two preventive interventions to reduce heavy episodic
drinking (HED) and related-harm among incoming college students. The purpose of this
report is to describe the methodology of this trial and share the lessons learned in
terms of recruiting and retaining a large sample across a major transition period
(i.e., entering college), administering and comparing two complementary
interventions, and collecting and analyzing zero-inflated non-normal data using a
novel data-analytic technique. The reduction of HED among college students is a
national priority [1,2]. Over 70% of
college students report using alcohol, and approximately 40% report HED
(typically defined as five drinks in a row for men and four for women) [3]. While alcohol use is
common among late adolescents, the passage from high school to college is typified
by an increase in alcohol consumption and associated negative consequences [4-6]. Thus, the transition
from high school to college represents a period of critical importance with respect
to preventing and reducing heavy drinking and alcohol-related negative
consequences.Brief motivational interventions are one-on-one counseling sessions that utilize
motivational interviewing and personalized feedback to facilitate change in
health-related behaviors. They are the most empirically supported individual-level
intervention for reducing alcohol use and problems among heavy drinking college
students [7-13]. We expanded on past
research by administering the brief motivational intervention to college students
with heterogeneous drinking experiences and extending assessment periods beyond 1
year.Parent-based interventions are an emerging approach to prevent college student
drinking. These interventions target parents and promote parenting strategies
associated with lower levels of alcohol use and problems in adolescence; they build
on research indicating that parents exert a continued influence throughout the
college years [14-17]. However, the potential beneficial role of parental influence on college
student drinking has not been widely investigated [18-22], despite a substantial body of research
documenting the efficacy of family and parent-based substance use interventions for
younger adolescents [23-26].
This study
The Transitions Project was designed to simultaneously examine a brief
motivational and parent-based intervention as a means to reduce the onset and
growth of college student HED and alcohol-related consequences. A factorial
design was chosen to examine complementary influences on college student
drinking (parent and peer factors) [27] and to attempt to increase effect
sizes and reduce cost by combining interventions in one stand-alone trial [10,28].
Method
The Transitions Project used a
2 × 2 × 3 design with two
dichotomous between-subjects factors, brief motivational intervention (yes, no) and
parent-based intervention (yes, no), and one within-subjects factor (Time;
pre-matriculation, 10 months, 22 months). It was hypothesized that relative to an
assessment only control arm, the study interventions would reduce the initiation and
growth of HED and consequences among incoming college students, and the intervention
effect would be multiplicative; (i.e., combined intervention effects greater than
the sum of the individual effects). Secondary aims of this study included tests of
intervention mediators such as changes in descriptive norms, for the brief
motivational intervention, and changes in parental monitoring, for the parent-based
intervention.
Recruitment and retention
Eligible students and their parents were recruited from two successive cohorts of
incoming students at a mid-sized northeastern public university in the United
States. All procedures were approved and monitored by the university
Institutional Review Board (IRB).
Eligibility criteria
The target population for this research trial was matriculating first year
students ages 17–21 and their parents. Non-traditional students
(e.g., older, married, returning, and transfer students) were not eligible
to participate because of the emphasis on parent communication within the
home. Biological parents, stepparents, and legal guardians were eligible to
participate as long as they were living with the student during the
recruitment period.
Recruitment and consent
Recruitment took place by telephone in the summer prior to college
matriculation. Prior to the first telephone contact, a detailed consent form
and introductory letter were mailed to potential participants. For students
who were under 18 years of age during the recruitment phase, an assent form
as well as a parental permission letter was sent in lieu of the standard
consent form. Upon telephone contact, interested parents and students (ages
18 and older) were asked to provide oral consent and complete the baseline
assessment over the telephone. Students who were 17 years old were required
to provide oral assent and parental consent over the telephone. In-person
consent was waived because recruitment took place before the students
arrived on campus. IRB approval for oral consent was obtained in accordance
with 45 CFR 46 ‘Protection of Human Subjects,’ Section
46.117 c.2.Given the power differential between parent and child, we chose to recruit
students prior to parents to minimize intentional or unintentional parental
pressure. All participants were informed that their participation was
voluntary, and students were paid for their baseline participation
regardless of parent recruitment. Confidentiality procedures did not
guarantee complete anonymity for study participation due to recruitment of
family members within the same household.In an effort to recruit a gender-balanced parent sample, a mother or father
was randomly chosen as the initial recruitment target. If the pre-determined
parent was unwilling or unavailable, another parent was accepted for
recruitment (regardless of gender). We took this approach because fathers
have been under-represented in parent-based alcohol interventions with
college students [14,27,29,30]. All data were collected through a professional survey center
which utilized computer-assisted telephone interviewing. Interviewers were
trained, certified, and monitored periodically in the proper application of
standardized interviewing procedures and study protocols [31]. Interviewers
were blind to study arms.
Randomization and retention
Student–parent dyads were randomized to treatment arms after
consenting and completing the baseline assessment. Our trial used standard
protocols for subject tracking and multiple attempts to contact participants
in each follow-up period regardless of university enrollment status or
participation in previous assessments [32]. Home and local contact
information was collected at baseline and confirmed at all time points. Two
supplementary contacts, i.e., people who would know the
participants’ whereabouts at all times, were collected at each time
point.
Incentives
Students received $30 for completing the baseline interview,
$40 for completing the 10-month follow-up procedures, and
$50 after completing the 22-month follow-up procedures. Participants
who attended all appointments and completed follow-up procedures on time
were eligible for $10 and $20 cash bonuses at the 10- and
22-month follow-ups, respectively. Three $200 cash prizes were
awarded annually to randomly selected student participants. Parents were
offered $40 at each time point.
Assessments
Student follow-ups took place at 10 and 22 months and were anchored according to
the baseline completion date. Assessment time points were chosen to assess
students while they were on campus and capture long-term (>6 months)
intervention effects rarely examined in past research. The parent follow-up took
place at 12 months post-baseline and was timed to coincide with students return
home for their first summer break in order to adequately assess parenting
behaviors. All student assessments took place by telephone and lasted
approximately 45–60 min. Parent follow-ups took place by
mail.
Interventions
Brief motivational intervention
The brief motivational intervention used in this study was modeled after the
Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention for College Students (BASICS)
program [33] and
included two counselor-facilitated in-person interventions during the
freshman year. The initial 1-h meeting took place in the fall, and the
half-hour ‘booster’ session took place in the spring.
Counselors (n = 16) were
bachelor’s- and master’s-level psychology students trained
in motivational interviewing and intervention content. Training and weekly
group supervision were conducted by a PhD-level psychologist with years of
experience in delivering, supervising, and researching brief motivation
interventions [11].A central component of the brief motivational intervention is the delivery of
‘personalized feedback’ to students regarding
alcohol-related behavior and beliefs. Feedback forms were created using
assessment data gathered approximately 2 weeks prior to scheduled
interventions (once in the fall and once in the spring). Drinkers received
feedback on their current alcohol use and related-problems as well as their
drinking compared to ‘average students.’ Abstainers received
feedback on the safety and health benefits of abstinence, their experiences
with second-hand effects of alcohol, and their abstinence-related
self-efficacy. Booster sessions incorporated feedback on current and past
drinking to reflect change in alcohol-related behavior since the initial
evaluation. Clinicians were trained to present all feedback using an
empathic non-confrontational style and students were given feedback forms to
take home.To monitor intervention fidelity, the clinical supervisor randomly selected
5–10% of audio tapes (50 for the initial fall intervention
and 26 for the spring intervention), and coded them in their entirety using
the Motivational Interviewing Treatment Integrity scale [34]. Written
feedback was provided to counselors. Session evaluation forms were also
completed by students and counselors after each session to assess the
quality and delivery of intervention components. Evaluation forms were
similar across time points.
Parent-based intervention
The parent-based intervention consisted of a 32-page parent handbook which
was mailed to parents in the summer before students matriculated to college.
The handbook itself was modified from an original version [30] and included
information designed to raise parental awareness of college student alcohol
use and provide strategies to help reduce student drinking and associated
consequences. These strategies included increasing parent–teen
alcohol-related communication and parental monitoring, and reducing parental
permissiveness for drinking. A ‘booster’ letter was mailed a
year later that reviewed handbook concepts and encouraged parents to
continue to implement strategies to reduce college student alcohol
abuse.In addition to the parent handbook, parents received a letter explaining the
intervention, and a handbook evaluation form. The letter informed parents
that their evaluations were needed to assess and improve the handbook [30]. We hoped that
this letter would encourage all parents to read the materials and provide us
with feedback. The evaluation form served as our primary measure of
intervention fidelity and assessed readability, usefulness, and clarity of
the handbook. Parents who did not return the evaluation by mail were
contacted via telephone by the survey research center.
Outcomes and data analysis
At all time points, students were assessed regarding: (1) whether and how
frequently they engaged in HED; (2) whether and how often they experienced
alcohol-related negative consequences; and (3) hypothesized intervention
mediators. Because our study was designed to enroll students with a range of
alcohol-related experiences, our data contained a large proportion of zero
values (i.e., students who did not drink) in addition to data reflecting very
heavy drinking. To address this skew in our data distribution, we chose to
conduct our analysis using two-part latent growth curve-modeling. This technique
is well suited to address the heterogeneity arising from zero-inflated data by
simultaneously creating two correlated models from a single outcome variable;
one model for the binary (onset) portion and one model for continuous (rate of
change) portion of the variable’s distribution [35,36]. In Part 1 (the binary portion),
the outcome variable is modeled as a random-effects logistic growth model with
the log odds of use regressed on growth factors [37]. In Part 2 (the continuous
portion), the non-zero continuous frequency of the outcome is modeled using the
latent growth model [38]. For this study, the binary part of the model estimated growth
in onset of HED or consequences (coded as 0 and 1). The continuous part of the
model estimated change in the frequency of HED or consequences for drinkers who
initially reported one or more instances of these behaviors.An important advantage of the two-part model approach over the censored normal
model [39] for
fitting discrete mixture models to longitudinal zero-inflated data [39,40] is the ability to
estimate the unique effects of covariates on each of the two parts even when
they are correlated [37,38].
Two-part latent growth models, therefore, enable the separate evaluation of
intervention, mediating, and covarying factors on onset and growth of outcome
variables. Thus, we were able to determine whether our interventions affected
mediators and whether the mediators affected change in onset and growth of
outcome variables. We estimated the effects of the brief motivational
intervention, the parent-based intervention, and their interaction on all
10-month mediators regardless of an overall intervention effect to determine
whether the intervention significantly changed the hypothesized mediator(s) in
the desired direction and whether the mediator subsequently was related to the
outcome measure in the predicted direction. This analysis is especially
important for discovering unexpected relationships that may mask an overall
intervention effect due to suppression effects [41].
Results
Successful recruitment of a representative sample of 1014 student–parent
dyads was achieved across 2 cohort years with minimal refusal (Figure 1). Urn randomization produced
equivalent groups at baseline in terms of demographic and primary outcome variables.
The student sample was 57%
(n = 580) female with a mean age of 18.4
years (SD = 0.41). The parent sample was 59%
(n = 594) female. Retention of
90.8% (n = 921) of randomized
students was achieved at the 10-month follow-up, and of 84%
(n = 852) at the 22-month follow-up.
Retention was significantly higher in the assessment-only group (94.5%)
relative to the combined intervention group (86.8%) at 10 months. There were
no significant differences in attrition by experimental group at 22 months and no
baseline differences on any outcome variables between study completers and
non-completers.
1One parent–student dyad was excluded from follow-up
due to death (unrelated to the study). Three dyads were removed because
student participants began working at the survey center collecting data
for this trial.
Student recruitment and retentionAO, assessment
only; BMI, brief motivational intervention; PBI, parent-based
intervention; FU, follow-up.1One parent–student dyad was excluded from follow-up
due to death (unrelated to the study). Three dyads were removed because
student participants began working at the survey center collecting data
for this trial.
Intervention delivery and fidelity
Among students randomly assigned to receive the brief motivational
intervention, 95% (n = 476)
received the initial intervention (85% in-person, and 15% by
mail), and 90% (n = 451)
received the booster session (90% in-person and 10% by
mail). Most students (≥92%) endorsed key components of the
brief motivational intervention including high clinician rapport, empathy,
and professionalism. Eighty-eight percent indicated feelings of enhanced
self-efficacy.Among parents randomly assigned to receive the parent intervention
89% (n = 448) completed the
evaluation questionnaire by mail
(n = 368) or telephone
(n = 80). Approximately,
89% of responding parents reported being ‘very
satisfied’ or ‘mostly satisfied’ with the handbook
as a whole and reading ‘most’ or ‘all’ of
the material. The handbook chapters were rated as useful, interesting, and
understandable by approximately 84% of parents.
Data collection and outcomes
Student data reflected a wide range of drinking behavior across all time points.
As anticipated, data for the primary outcomes contained a large number of zero
values (e.g., non-drinkers) and a large proportion of students engaging in HED
and/or consequences. At baseline, 28%
(n = 281) of students reported
abstaining from alcohol for at least the past year, decreasing to 17%
(n = 154) at the 10-month
follow-up, and 13% (n = 112) at
the 22-month follow-up (percentages adjusted for attrition). Approximately, half
of the baseline sample (51%,
n = 517) reported no instances of HED
in the past month, and the mean number of consequences experienced in the past 3
months was 5.39 (SD = 7.67).As reported elsewhere [42], the brief motivational intervention significantly reduced the
onset of HED and alcohol-related consequences at 10 and 22 months. However, the
observed effects were small and the parent-based intervention did not reduce
onset or growth of HED or consequences. Evidence for the combined intervention
effects was limited to alcohol-related consequences, with no effect observed for
the combined intervention on HED. In terms of mediation, we found a consistent
indirect brief motivational intervention effect through descriptive norms on
both onset and growth in HED and consequences, but no evidence in support of
hypothesized parent-based intervention mediators.
Limitations and lessons learned
While the Transitions Project was successful in many respects, there are several
limitations of this trial. In attempting to evaluate potential explanations for null
and modest intervention effects, several design issues initially considered in the
planning of this trial, re-emerged. Chief among these include questions were: (1)
did assessment reactivity take place among parents and/or students? (2) did our
assessment schedule miss critical short-term intervention effects?; and (3) were our
interventions delivered with fidelity? We also have considered how these questions
could have been answered with alternative experimental designs and study
procedures.The potential for assessment reactivity to attenuate or mask intervention effects is
a serious and common problem in clinical research and is especially problematic when
the size of intervention effects is modest [40,43]. We believe our assessment protocol,
which included an in-depth assessment of process-related variables at baseline, may
have potentially masked parent-based intervention effects by motivating
control-group parents to engage in behavior that may have reduced alcohol use among
students. Previous research has sought to avoid this issue through the use of a
post-test only comparison design [30]. We opted for a pre-test post-test
design in order to better model change over time. However, to disentangle
intervention and assessment effects, an alternative study design is necessary, such
as the Solomon Four Group Design [44] which crosses two intervention arms
with baseline assessment (Yes/No). However, in most large clinical trials this
approach is prohibitively expensive and impractical. Newer, more efficient, methods
for evaluating assessment reactivity are available which involve including
‘planned missingness’ in the assessment design [45].Another aspect of our study design that deserves consideration is assessment timing.
In the social sciences assessment, timing is often dictated by convenience or
tradition rather than empirically based expectations regarding intervention effect
periods [46]. We reviewed
relevant research and found that intervention efficacy was well documented through a
6-month follow-up period for brief motivational interventions, with several
exceptions [47,48]. For this reason, we
decided to focus on longer term outcome assessments to determine whether these
interventions could produce lasting change. The use of lengthy assessments coupled
with generous and increasing participation incentives enabled strong tests of the
primary and secondary aims but used a large proportion of study resources, thus
limiting our ability to afford a short-term assessment. Upon completion of this
trial, we believe our null findings reflect a failure to capture critical periods of
short-term intervention effects that decayed over time. Therefore, we recommend
using three follow-up time points in combination with a baseline assessment to
detect long-term and short-term, potentially transient, intervention effects and to
model non-linear (e.g., quadratic, piecewise) effects.Our lack of objective intervention fidelity measures is an additional limitation of
this trial. Subjective measures of intervention fidelity employed by this study
indicated the interventions were delivered as intended, but a lack of objective
measures limits the strength of our inferences. Consistent with prior research
[30], our parent
handbook evaluation asked parents whether they read and understood the intervention
materials. Parents may have provided socially desirable responses; the non-anonymous
nature of the assessment may have exacerbated this effect. Similarly, participants
in the brief motivational intervention were asked about clinician qualities and
intervention components. Although their responses were collected anonymously after
sessions, the possibility of subjective biases cannot be ruled out. In fact, our
measures of intervention fidelity were relatively high and invariant across all
categories for both interventions suggesting the possibility of social desirability
and ceiling effects.Ideally, future studies should examine the quality of intervention delivery using
objective means, such as delivering the handbook online and tracking parent access.
In terms of the brief motivational intervention, future trials should audio or
video-record sessions and have them coded by at least two independent reviewers.
Detailed, more objective procedures for assessing brief motivational intervention
fidelity are available and increasingly expected in clinical trials [49,50]. Nonetheless, our supervision approach
and the brief motivational intervention training we employed have been used in
previous randomized controlled trials that obtained very good estimates of
motivational interviewing consistency [10,51,52].
Conclusions
In conclusion, the Transitions Project had many strengths, most notably the use of a
factorial design capable of testing unique and combined effects of two potentially
complementary interventions and the implementation of novel data-analytic techniques
uniquely suited to our data. Limitations included our inability to explicate the
extent to which assessment reactivity or the length of our follow-up interval may
help explain the lack of support for some study hypotheses.In terms of study successes, a large sample of students and parents were recruited
prior to college matriculation. Consistent with other research works, the use of
monetary ballooning incentives and a highly trained survey center was likely
integral to recruitment and long-term retention success [31,53,54]. Intervention administration and
participation were also high. Abstainers and drinkers were willing to attend
in-person interventions and parents were willing to read mailed intervention
materials and return evaluation forms. These participation and retention rates
should encourage future researchers who attempt to use similar techniques and study
similar populations. By including abstainers in our study, we were able to examine
intervention effects among an at-risk but understudied group. The data complexity,
the abstainers introduced (e.g., a high-zero count) was handled using latent growth
curve modeling as an alternative to traditional data transformation. As published
examples of two-part latent growth curve modeling are limited, interested readers
are directed to our outcomes paper [42] and other published studies using this
technique [29,38].In summary, the choice of experimental and quasi-experimental designs in randomized
controlled trials is a complex, multi-faceted endeavor with inevitable tradeoffs. We
hope that consideration of the lessons we have learned and presented will benefit
those who undertake similar research in the future.
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