| Literature DB >> 27226948 |
Anne H Berman1, Mikael Gajecki2, Kristina Sinadinovic1, Claes Andersson3.
Abstract
Mobile interventions based on text messages, automated telephone programs (interactive voice response (IVR)), and smartphone apps offer a new approach targeting hazardous alcohol use in university students. This review covers seven recent studies involving college or university students that evaluated intervention efficacy in comparison to controls: four using text messages, one using IVR, and two smartphone apps. Only the study evaluating IVR reported positive results for the primary outcome. Two of the text message studies reported positive results on secondary outcomes, while the other two reported no differences in comparison to control groups. For smartphone apps, one study reported positive results on secondary outcomes, while the other showed no differences in comparison to controls for a web-based app and negative results for a native app. Further development of mobile interventions is needed for this at-risk population, both in terms of intervention content and use of robust research designs.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol; Automated telephony; Hazardous drinking; Intervention; Review; Smartphone apps; Text messages; University/college students
Year: 2016 PMID: 27226948 PMCID: PMC4856712 DOI: 10.1007/s40429-016-0099-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Addict Rep
Fig. 1Flowchart of review process
Overview of study sample characteristics, interventions, study conditions, outcome measures, and findings
| Study citation | Country | Sample | Intervention | Study conditions | Follow-ups | Outcome measures | Summary of findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bendtsen and Bendtsen [ | Sweden |
| Four types of fully automated push-based messages (food for thought messages, tasks, challenges, and reflective massages) delivered via text messages or via e-mail once a week (in total four messages per week) for 4 weeks. All messages included a direct link to the study’s home page providing information on safe drinking limits and a web-based single-session alcohol assessment | E1 = emailed messages four times/week | Post-intervention (4 weeks from baseline) | SCAC | 23 % of participants reported self-perceived change. |
| Mason et al. [ | USA |
| Four to six personalized text messages, based on MI principles with social network counseling, including reflections on peer risks and protection, were sent out daily for four consecutive days. Booster messages could be sent out on request | E = daily text messaging | 1 month | AUDIT, Quantity, DLO, MDLM, ADOLM | E = C |
| Moore et al. [ | United Kingdom |
| One mobile text message delivering feedback on expenditures for alcohol in the past month, based on daily registration of alcohol consumption in the past month | E = daily text message drinking survey + one-time drinking expenditure feedback | 1 month | DLD | E = C |
| Riordan et al. [ | New Zealand |
| EMA: text messages were sent out every night during orientation week with a health or social consequences of alcohol use, prompting students to apply the advice from the text messages in a real-world setting. The social messages were sent on nights with planed orientation events while health messages were sent on all other nights |
| EMA occasions during one university term | Quantity (orientation week), WD (semester) |
|
| Andersson [ | Sweden |
| The intervention was designed to reduce eBAC by providing personalized normative feedback and protective behavioral strategies, delivered either as a single intervention or as an intervention repeated at a 1-week interval. The intervention was delivered either by IVR to a mobile device or over the Internet to stationary computers | E1 = 1 IVR call, 1 week after recruitment | E1 5 weeks post intervention (6 weeks from baseline) | Primary: peak eBAC/week. | E1 < C AUDIT |
| Gajecki et al. [ | Sweden |
| Intervention 1—Promillekoll: registration of one’s own alcohol consumption in real time, generating the user’s eBAC and providing information and feedback on harmful levels of eBAC (over 0.06 %). Several strategies for maintaining alcohol consumption below this limit were offered, as well as a warning if registered alcohol consumption would result in a harmful eBAC level. | E1 = smartphone app | Post-intervention (7 weeks from baseline) | Quantity, frequency, BOPW, average eBAC/week, peak eBAC/month | E1 > C, frequency |
| Witkiewitz et al. [ | USA |
| BASICS-mobile: integration of some components of BASICS (that normally consist of personalized feedback about drinking behavior with components of cognitive-behavioral treatment, including education regarding the effects of alcohol on the brain and behavior, skills training, risk awareness, expectancy information, and suggestions for less risky drinking habits, as well as brainstorming alternatives to heavy drinking) and feedback about smoking and “urge-surfing,” a mindfulness-based approach, drawn from relapse prevention and mindfulness-based relapse prevention. The intervention was delivered in real-time via a smartphone for 14 days | E1 = BASICS mobile modules and daily EMA | 1 month | DPDD, BOPW, YAAPST | E1 = more BASICS modules associated with reduced risk of drinking during intervention period |
Note: BASICS Brief Alcohol and Screening Intervention for College Students, E experimental condition, C control condition, SCAC self-perceived change in alcohol consumption, Quantity standard glasses consumed per week, Frequency drinking occasions per week, BOPW binge-drinking occasions per week, eBAC estimated blood alcohol concentration, AUDIT alcohol use disorder test, DPW drinks past week, DLO drinks last occasion, MDLM maximum drinks last month, ADOLM average drinks occasion last month, DLD drinks last day, EMA ecological momentary assessment, EMI ecological momentary intervention, WD weekend drinking, DPDD drinks per drinking day, YAAPST young adult alcohol problem screening test