| Literature DB >> 26259000 |
Jessica M Cronce1, Joyce N Bittinger1, Junny Liu1, Jason R Kilmer2.
Abstract
Alcohol consumption is prevalent among college students and can be associated with serious negative consequences. Several efficacious programs using one-on-one brief intervention techniques have been developed to target high-risk drinking by individual students, such as the Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention for College Students (BASICS) (Dimeff et al. 1999). To reach a larger population (e.g., the incoming freshman class), researchers have adapted these interventions so that students can access them via the Internet or in some other electronic format.The purpose of this review is to discuss specific alcohol intervention programs that were (1) designed to be delivered remotely (e.g., via the Web or on an electronic device) without interaction with a provider and (2) were tested among college students using a randomized controlled trial design. Specific studies were drawn from earlier reviews as well as a comprehensive literature search. Although many programs have limited research support, and some findings are mixed, components that were directly translated from in-person BASICS to remote-delivery mediums (i.e., personalized feedback interventions [PFIs], personalized normative feedback [PNF] interventions), and broader programs that incorporate PFI/ PNF, show promise in reducing alcohol use and/or negative consequences. However, more research is needed and suggestions for how the field can move these interventions forward are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 26259000 PMCID: PMC4432858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alcohol Res ISSN: 2168-3492
Summary of Methodologies and Outcomes for Previously Unreviewed Studies Included in the Current Review
| Authors Year | Group Studied | Intervention Condition | Behavioral Alcohol Assessment/Outcome Measures | Follow-up Assessment | Conclusions/Results For Electronic Intervention Condition(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Undergraduate students who were mandated to an alcohol intervention for violating university alcohol policies ( | Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention for College Students (BASICS) (individual in-person brief motivational intervention [BMI]); CHOICES (group in-person); e-CheckUpToGo (individual personalized feedback intervention [PFI]). | Alcohol Timeline Followback; BAC; Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index. | 3 months | e-CheckUpToGo was associated with significant within-person reductions in alcohol-related harms, which were similar to those observed for the BASICS condition. No reductions were evident on indices of alcohol use for those receiving e-CheckUpToGo. | |
| University students (ages 18–67; 95 percent undergraduates) reporting consumption of alcohol at least once every 6 months ( | Immediate (weeks 1 through 7) vs. delayed (weeks 8 through 15) access to the Unitcheck electronic intervention vs. assessment only control. | Retrospective weekly drinking diary, AUDIT. | 4 follow-up assessments across the 24-week study | Significant reductions in drinks per drinking occasion were evident in the delayed intervention and assessment-only conditions, with no effect in the immediate intervention condition. Those assigned to either intervention condition that completed more than two of the five total assessments showed greater reductions in drinking than those in the control condition. | |
| Freshmen college students who were living in dormitory housing ( | Four sessions of online | Daily drinking questionnaire, 28-day Timeline Followback (TLFB), Young Adult Alcohol Problems Screening Test (YAAPST). | Posttest at end of intervention (9 weeks) | Among those assigned to M-PASS relative to control: high-risk male drinkers reported fewer episodes of heavy drinking; high-risk female drinkers reported lower total drinks on TLFB; low-risk female drinkers report fewer drinks per drinking day. | |
| 3-month followup of sample reported in | See | See | 3 months after intervention end | Among those assigned to M-PASS relative to control: male and female high-risk drinkers reported fewer episodes of heavy episodic consumption and high-risk female drinkers also reported fewer alcohol-related consequences. Further, M-PASS showed protective effect among nondrinking women in terms of total drinks consumed. | |
| Students enrolled in first-year psychology courses ( | E-mailed PFI vs. e-mailed educational information about the risks of alcohol consumption. | AUDIT, Daily Drinking Questionnaire, Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index. | 6 weeks | Relative to alcohol education, e-mailed PFI was associated with fewer drinks per week and fewer days drunk in the past 30 days. | |
| College students who were mandated to an alcohol intervention for first-time campus alcohol policy violations ( | BMI or Alcohol 101+ program: self-chosen ( | Daily Drinking Questionnaire; AUDIT; Brief Young Adult Alcohol Consequences Questionnaire. | 1 and 2 months | Reductions in alcohol use and consequences were evident among those receiving the BMI relative to Alcohol 101+ at the 2-month followup. The absolute efficacy of Alcohol 101+ cannot be determined due to the absence of an assessment control condition; however, those who were randomly assigned to Alcohol 101+ showed greater reductions in drinks per drinking day and drinks per week relative to those who chose Alcohol 101+. | |
| High-school seniors and their parents ( | MyStudentBody-Parent (MSB-P) online intervention vs. attention control (e-mailed alcohol education newsletters). | Single question assessing number of heavy-drinking episodes in the past 30 days using 5/4 gender-specific criteria within 2-hour time frame on a given occasion. | 1 week postintervention, 3 and 6 months | No treatment effect on proportion of teens reporting episodes of heavy drinking. | |
| First-year NCAA Division 1 intercollegiate athletes ( | e-CheckUpToGo vs. Web-based alcohol education program. | Daily Drinking Questionnaire. | 3 months | Relative to control, high-risk drinkers in the e-CheckUpToGo condition significantly reduced their weekly drinking, peak drinking quantity and frequency of drinking to intoxication. There were no differences among low-risk drinkers. | |
| Freshmen college students randomly assigned as intact orientation groups ( | e-CheckUpToGo vs. assessment-only control. | Daily Drinking Questionnaire; Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index; individual items assessing peak alcohol consumption and frequency of drinking to intoxication. | 3 months | Relative to control, high-risk drinkers in the e-CheckUpToGo condition significantly reduced their peak drinking quantity and frequency of drinking to intoxication. However, only seven participants were in the high-risk e-CheckUpToGo condition. | |
| Students mandated to university counseling services for violating university alcohol policies ( | Online e-CheckUpToGo feedback only (PFI) vs. counselor-facilitated review of e-CheckUpToGo feedback (BMI). | Daily Drinking Questionnaire; Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index; individual items assessing peak alcohol consumption and frequency of drinking to intoxication. | 30 days | Participants in both conditions showed significant within-person reductions in weekly and peak drinking quantity, frequency of drinking to intoxication, and alcohol-related consequences. No significant differences were found between the groups. | |
| 8-month followup of sample reported in | See | See | 8 months | Relative to those in the e-CheckUp-ToGo PFI condition, participants in the BMI condition showed significant reductions in weekly drinking quantity and frequency of heavy episodic drinking. Participants in the PFI condition showed increases on these drinking indices. | |
| Sophomore students from a single Swedish university who consumed 180/120 (men/women) grams of alcohol or more per week in the past 3 months and/ or consumed 60/48 (men/ women) grams of alcohol or more on two or more occasions in the past month ( | Personalized normative feedback (PNF) with harm reduction tips compared with a minimal feedback control (comparing the student’s drinking to national safe drinking guidelines). | Items assessing average weekly alcohol consumption, frequency of heavy episodic drinking and peak BAC; specific measures used were not indicated. | 3 and 6 months | Significant within-person reductions in weekly consumption in the PNF group, and significant within-person reductions in number of heavy drinking episodes in both conditions at both followups. No significant between-group differences for alcohol-related outcomes at either time point. | |
| Undergraduate students from a single university in the United Kingdom ( | Web-based instructions: 2 (mental simulation of achieving goal of keeping drinking within safe limits vs. no mental simulation) × 2 (intention to implement reduction in drinking vs. no implementation intention) design. | Items assessing number of alcohol units consumed and number of episodes of heavy drinking in the past 4 weeks using criteria applicable in the United Kingdom; specific measures used were not indicated. | 1 month | Receipt of the mental simulation instructions without the implementation intention instructions was associated with reductions in number of units consumed and heavy episodic drinking. | |
| College students of northeast Asian descent ( | Web-based ALDH2 genotype-specific feedback (ALDH2*1/*1, ALDH2*1/*2, or ALDH2*2/*2) vs. attention control. | Daily Drinking Questionnaire. | 30 days | Participants heterozygous for the ALDH 2*2 allele (i.e., ALDH2*1/*2) who received genetic-risk feedback personalized to their genotype showed reductions in quantity and frequency of drinking relative to control. | |
| College students who reported one or more occasion of heavy episodic drinking in the past 2 weeks using the 5/4 gender-specific criteria with an associated blood alcohol content [BAC] of .08%. (Two trials: | College Drinkers Check-up (CDCU). In experiment 1, CDCU vs. assessment-only control; in experiment 2: CDCU vs. a delayed-assessment control group. | AUDIT, Brief Drinker’s Profile, 19 items from the CORE Institute’s alcohol survey related to negative consequences. | Experiment 1: 1 and 12 months; Experiment 2: I month | Experiment 1: Adjusting for multiple comparisons, reductions in peak BAC on two heavier occasions in the past month were evident at 1-month followup among those assigned to CDCU, but the effect was absent at 12 months. Experiment 2: CDCU associated with significant reductions in drinks per week, typical peak BAC, and average number of drinks and BAC on two heavier occasions in the past month. | |
| Students at a New Zealand student health service scoring 8 or higher on the AUDIT ( | Single-dose PFI vs. two-dose PFI vs. education-only control. | AUDIT, additional items assessing frequency of drinking, typical quantity per occasion, total volume, frequency of heavy drinking episodes (120/80 g, men/women), consequences of heavy drinking; specific measures used were not indicated. | 1, 6, and 12 months | Reductions in frequency of drinking, total consumption, and academic consequences at 6 months in both PFI conditions relative to control. Additional reductions in frequency of drinking, typical quantity, and frequency of heavy episodic consumption at 6 months in the multidose PFI condition. Reductions in total consumption and academic problems were still evident at 12 months in the single dose PFI condition. Reductions in academic problems were also still evident at 12 months in the multidose condition, and effects on nonacademic consequences emerged. Reductions in AUDIT scores (alcohol problems) were evident in both PFI groups at 12 months. | |
| Undergraduates at a single Australian university who scored 8 or higher on the AUDIT and who exceeded Australian gender-specific standards for one or more episodes of heavy episodic drinking in the past 4 weeks ( | Two-dose PFI vs. assessment only control. | AUDIT, Alcohol Problems Scale (APS), Academic Role Expectation and Alcohol Scale (AREAS), additional items assessing frequency and quantity of drinking, and heavy-drinking episodes. | 1 and 6 months | Relative to control, participants in the PFI condition reported significant reductions in frequency and quantity of drinking (drinks per occasion and total consumption) at 1-month followup; effects on frequency of drinking and total consumption were maintained at 6 months. | |
| Non-Maori students at seven New Zealand universities who scored 4 or higher on the AUDIT-C ( | PFI including screening for, and feedback regarding, alcohol dependence vs. assessment only. | AUDIT-C, AREAS, additional items assessing alcohol use; for intervention participants only: AUDIT, Leeds Dependence Questionnaire. | 5 months | PFI with dependence screening and feedback resulted in fewer drinks per drinking occasion at followup; however, analyses accounting for attrition call this finding into question. No effects evident on five other indices of alcohol use. | |
| Heavy-drinking Caucasian and Asian undergraduates at two West Coast universities ( | Web-based PFI vs. eight Web-based PNF conditions differing on level of specificity of student-normative referent groups: typical same-campus student or a same-campus student at one (either gender, race, or Greek affiliation), or a combination of two, or all three levels of specificity vs. non-alcohol normative feedback control. | Daily Drinking Questionnaire, Quantity/Frequency Index, Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index. | 1, 3, 6, and 12 months | Both the PFI and PNF groups reported significant reductions in indices of alcohol use relative to control, with participation in any PNF group also associated with significant reductions in alcohol-related negative consequences. PFI and PNF were no different than one another across alcohol use and consequence outcomes. Comparison among PNF conditions supports the use of the “typical student” normative referent. | |
| Students intending to go on a spring break (SB) trip with friends as well as to engage in heavy episodic drinking (using the 5/4 gender-specific criteria) on at least 1 day of SB ( | Standard BASICS vs. SB-focused BASICS vs. SB-focused BASICS with a friend vs. SB-focused PFI vs. SB-focused PFI with a friend vs. attention control. | Modified Daily Drinking Questionnaire to assess SB drinking intentions (baseline) and actual consumption (followup), 12 items modified from the Young Adult Alcohol Problems Screening Test and the Young Adult Alcohol Consequences Questionnaire to measure anticipated (baseline) and actual (followup) alcohol-related consequences. | 1 week after SB | Neither of the PFI conditions (with or without a friend) resulted in reductions in alcohol use or consequences. Only in-person SB-focused BASICS without a friend reduced drinking versus attention control. | |
| College students who reported being sexually active within the past year, typically with a member of the opposite sex, and who also reported at least one occasion of heavy episodic drinking in the past month using the 5/4 gender-specific criteria ( | Alcohol-only PNF (PNF-A), alcohol-related risky sexual behavior (RSB) only PNF (PNF-RSB), combined alcohol and alcohol-related RSB PNF (PNF-C), or assessment-only control. | Daily Drinking Questionnaire, Quantity/Frequency Index, Brief Young Adult Alcohol Consequences Questionnaire, additional individual items assessing risky sexual behavior and normative perceptions of sexual behavior adapted from prior work by the first author. | 3 and 6 months | Compared with control, PNF-C and PNF-A were associated with reductions in drinking quantity and frequency at 3 months with most effects maintained at 6 months. PNF-C and PNF-RSB were effective in reducing frequency of drinking prior to sex at 3- but not 6-month followup. None of the interventions reduced alcohol-related negative consequences. | |
| Intercollegiate college athletes ( | PFI targeted to college athletes vs. standard PFI targeted to college students in general vs. alcohol education control. | Daily Drinking Questionnaire, Brief Young Adult Alcohol Consequences Questionnaire. | 1 and 6 months | Those receiving the targeted PFI who were currently in their athletic season ( | |
| Undergraduates enrolled in psychology courses at a single Southeastern university who scored 8 or higher on the AUDIT ( | Automated personalized text messaging (four to six messages for 4 days that required a brief response) vs. assessment-only control. | AUDIT, additional items assessing quantity and frequency of alcohol use; specific measures used not specified. | 1 month | No effects on alcohol use or problems. | |
| Freshmen and sophomore college students from 22 universities in the United Kingdom ( | E-mailed PNF vs. repeated assessment-only control vs. posttest-only (at 12-month followup) control. | AUDIT, individual items developed by the authors assessing alcohol quantity, frequency and alcohol-related consequences. | 6 and 12 months | Compared with repeated-assessment-only control, participants in the PNF group reported less weekly drinking at 6 months (looking at the full sample and a high-risk subsample), but this effect was absent at 12 months. No other effects of the intervention on alcohol use or consequences were evident. | |
| College students reporting at least one occasion of heavy episodic drinking in the past month using the 5/4 gender-specific criteria ( | BASICS vs. e-CheckUpToGo vs. assessment only. | Daily Drinking Questionnaire, individual item assessing number of heavy drinking episodes in the past month. | 1 month | Participants assigned to e-CheckUpToGo showed with-in-person reductions in weekly drinking quantity ( | |
| Freshmen reporting at least one occasion of heavy episodic drinking in the past month using the 5/4 gender-specific criteria ( | One- vs. four-dose gender-specific PNF vs. one-vs. four-dose gender-neutral PNF vs. attention control. | Daily Drinking Questionnaire, Alcohol Consumption Index, Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index. | 6, 12, 18, and 24 months | Biannually administered gender-specific PNF was associated with decreased weekly drinking for men and women, and with fewer-alcohol related consequences for women only. No effects were evident for either of the single-dose PNF conditions or the biannual (four-dose) gender-neutral PNF. | |
| Students intending to engage in heavy episodic drinking (using the 5/4 gender-specific criteria) on their 21st birthday ( | Standard BASICS vs. 21st birthday–focused BASICS vs. 21st birthday–focused BASICS with friend vs. 21st birthday–focused PFI vs. 21st birthday–focused PFI with friend vs. an attention control. | Modified Daily Drinking Questionnaire to measure 21st birthday drinking intentions (baseline) and actual consumption (followup), modified Young Adult Alcohol Problems Screening Test to measure anticipated (baseline) and actual (followup) alcohol-related consequences. | 1 week after 21st birthday | 21st birthday–focused PFI (without friend) was associated with lower BACs on participants’ 21st birthday compared with control, similar to standard BASICS, but had no effect on total consumption or consequences. 21st birthday–focused PFI with friend reduced alcohol-related consequences relative to control, similar to all three BASICS conditions but did not reduce consumption or BAC. | |
| Introductory psychology students reporting two or more occasions of heavy episodic drinking in the past month using the 5/4 gender-specific criteria or who had an AUDIT score of 8 or higher ( | PFI vs. attention control. | Daily Drinking Questionnaire, Young Adult Alcohol Problems Screening Test. | 1 month | Those with high (vs. low) levels of alcohol-related consequences at baseline who were assigned to the PFI showed significantly greater reductions in weekly drinking quantity and number of heavy-drinking episodes relative to control participants. | |
| Multicampus study ( | AlcoholEdu for College vs. control. | Individual items assessing past-30-day alcohol use, average number of drinks per occasion, and heavy episodic consumption. | N/A (fall and spring assessments were cross-sectional, not longitudinal) | Relative to control campuses, students at colleges assigned to AlcoholEdu for College reported reductions in past 30-day alcohol use and frequency of heavy episodic consumption in the fall; how-ever, these effects were absent at the subsequent spring assessment. | |
| Additional findings from | See | Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index. | See | Relative to control campuses, students at colleges assigned to AlcoholEdu for College reported reductions in alcohol consequences in the fall; however, these effects were absent at the subsequent spring assessment. | |
| Undergraduates (ages 18–21) who planned to go on a SB trip with their friends ( | Combined SB alcohol use and SB alcohol-related RSB PNF vs. assessment-only control. | Individual items assessing anticipated and actual alcohol use, sexual behavior, and associated consequences. | 1 week after SB | No significant differences between PNF and control on alcohol use, risky sexual behavior or related consequences. | |
| Freshmen who have never met criteria for DSM–IV alcohol or drug dependence, who reported any drinking in the past 6 months and who reported a low or high subjective level of response (LR) to alcohol ( | Prevention videos tailored to a low LR to alcohol vs. non-tailored prevention videos. | Individual items assessing alcohol use and associated consequences (drawn from the Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index). | Immediate posttest and 4 weeks following end of the intervention | Although all participants showed significant decreases in typical and peak drinks per occasion, participants with a low LR who were assigned to the tailored group showed greater reductions than those assigned to the nontailored group. Additionally, in terms of typical drinks per occasion, those with high LR assigned to the nontailored group showed greater reductions than those in the tailored group. |