Background In recent years, interventions that deliver online personalized feedback on alcohol use have been developed and appear to be a feasible way to curb heavy drinking. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) among the general adult population, however, are scarce. The present study offers an RCT of Drinktest.nl, an online personalized feedback intervention in the Netherlands. Objective The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness of computer-based personalized feedback on heavy alcohol use in male adults. Methods Randomization stratified by age and educational level was used to assign participants to either the intervention consisting of online personalized feedback or an information-only control condition. Participants were told as a cover story that they would evaluate newly developed health education materials. Participants were males (n = 450), aged 18 to 65 years, presenting with either heavy alcohol use (> 20 units of alcohol weekly) and/or binge drinking (> 5 units of alcohol at a single occasion at least 1 day per week) in the past 6 months. They were selected with a screener from a sampling frame of 25,000 households. The primary outcome measure was the percentage of the participants that had successfully reduced their drinking levels to below the Dutch guideline threshold for at-risk drinking. Results Intention-to-treat analysis showed that in the experimental condition, 42% (97/230) of the participants were successful in reducing their drinking levels to below the threshold at the 1-month follow-up as compared with 31% (67/220) in the control group (odds ratio [OR] = 1.7, number needed to treat [NNT] = 8.6), which was statistically significant (χ2 1 = 6.67, P = .01). At the 6-month follow-up, the success rates were 46% (105/230) and 37% (82/220) in the experimental and control conditions, respectively (OR = 1.4, NNT = 11.9), but no longer statistically significant (χ2 1 = 3.25, P = .07). Conclusions Personalized online feedback on alcohol consumption appears to be an effective and easy way to change unhealthy drinking patterns in adult men, at least in the short-term. Trial registration International Standard Randomized Controlled Trial Number: NTR836; http://www.trialregister.nl/trialreg/admin/rctview.asp?TC=836 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/5ytnEz2vp)
Curbing Alcohol Use in Male Adults Through Computer Generated Personalized Advice: Randomized Controlled Trial
Brigitte Boon,A. Risselada,A. Huiberts,H. Riper,F. Smit
Published 2011 in Journal of Medical Internet Research
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2011
- Venue
Journal of Medical Internet Research
- Publication date
2011-06-30
- Fields of study
Medicine, Computer Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- 1-month follow-up
The follow-up assessment conducted one month after randomization.
Aliases: one-month follow-up
- 6-month follow-up
The follow-up assessment conducted six months after randomization.
Aliases: six-month follow-up
- binge drinking
Consuming more than 5 units of alcohol on a single occasion at least 1 day per week as defined in the screening criteria.
Aliases: binge use
- dutch guideline threshold for at-risk drinking
The drinking cutoff used to define whether participants had reduced alcohol use to a lower-risk level.
Aliases: at-risk drinking threshold
- heavy alcohol use
Drinking more than 20 units of alcohol per week as defined in the screening criteria.
Aliases: heavy drinking
- information-only control condition
A comparison condition that provided only informational materials rather than personalized feedback.
Aliases: control group
- male adults
Adult male participants aged 18 to 65 years enrolled in the trial.
Aliases: men, adult men
- online personalized feedback intervention
A computer-based alcohol intervention that delivers individualized feedback through a web-based format.
Aliases: Drinktest.nl, computer-generated personalized advice
REFERENCES
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CITED BY
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