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UnknownNCT03695653

Messaging Interventions to Reduce Alcohol Problems Project

Tailored Adaptive Mobile Messaging to Reduce Problem Drinking

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
730 (actual)
Sponsor
Partnership to End Addiction · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The study is designed to develop and test a tailored adaptive text messaging/short message service (SMS) intervention for individuals interested in reducing their alcohol consumption. According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, problem or risky drinking is defined as greater than 7 standard drinks per week for women and 14 standard drinks per week for men. Other groups have other criteria (e.g., 10 drinks for women and 14 for men per week). The Institute of Medicine reports that problem drinkers are those with mild-to-moderate problem severity who do not have physical dependence. Heavy drinking individuals with non-abstinence goals rarely seek treatment for excessive alcohol use, and newer methods such as internet screening and mobile apps provide opportunities to engage and treat this difficult to reach population. There are now 96 mobile phone contracts for every 100 people on earth, making mobile interventions a highly viable method for extending care beyond traditional methods. Text messaging or short message service (SMS) is the most widely available mode of mobile communication and despite its simplicity, has been proven to be a reliable and effective method to induce behavior change across behavioral health targets, including problem drinking. However, large scale randomized controlled trials are needed to provide the necessary empirical evidence to validate SMS interventions and understand the mediators and moderators of outcome for help seeking heavy drinkers who are using or unable to attend in-person care.

Detailed description

The study entitled, Tailored Adaptive Mobile Messaging to Reduce Problem Drinking (PD) is designed to develop and test a tailored adaptive text messaging/short message service (SMS) intervention for individuals interested in reducing their alcohol consumption. According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, problem or risky drinking is defined as greater than 7 standard drinks per week for women and 14 standard drinks per week for men. Other groups have other criteria (e.g., 10 drinks for women and 14 for men per week). The Institute of Medicine reports that problem drinkers are those with mild-to-moderate problem severity who do not have physical dependence. Heavy drinking individuals with non-abstinence goals rarely seek treatment for excessive alcohol use, and newer methods such as internet screening and mobile apps provide opportunities to engage and treat this difficult to reach population. There are now 96 mobile phone contracts for every 100 people on earth, making mobile interventions a highly viable method for extending care beyond traditional methods. Text messaging or short message service (SMS) is the most widely available mode of mobile communication and despite its simplicity, has been proven to be a reliable and effective method to induce behavior change across behavioral health targets, including problem drinking. However, large scale randomized controlled trials are needed to provide the necessary empirical evidence to validate SMS interventions and understand the mediators and moderators of outcome for help seeking heavy drinkers who are using or unable to attend in-person care. The investigators recently completed an R34 study to develop the first automated tailored adaptive (TA) text messaging intervention for problem drinking (PD) adults (Muench et al. 2017). The study compared TA to different automated once a day static messaging including: tailored only messaging (TO), loss framed messaging (LF), gain frame messaging (GF), and weekly mobile assessment only (MA) over 12 weeks in 171 problem drinkers recruited on the internet across the US. All messaging groups outperformed MA on most drinking outcomes, and the TA group had the largest effect sizes on every drinking outcome, with an average weekly drink reduction of 9 standard drinks at week 12. Over an 8-month period, 1149 individuals across the country took the web-based screening survey, highlighting the demand for messaging in this population. Furthermore, 94.7% of participants (Ps) enrolled completed the end of messaging week 12 survey and 80% wanted to continue messaging following the pilot trial. There were no adverse events in this study. Primary hypotheses: 1. The TA group will have significantly reduced weekly sum of standard drinks (SSD) and heavy drinking days (HDD) compared to MA at all time periods. 2. TO will have significantly reduced SSD and HDD compared to MA at all time points. 3. TA group will have significantly reduced SSD compared to TO at all time periods except one month follow-up. 4. Severity will moderate the relationship between TA, MA and TO and drinking in that high severity P's will make significantly greater changes in the TA group. Exploratory aims include testing other outcomes such as drinking related consequences by group, moderators such as gender and ethnicity, and mediators such as intervention relevance and self-efficacy.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALDrink Tracking (MA)Weekly drink tracking for self-monitoring and assessment
BEHAVIORALAdaptive Tailored (TA)Messages are sent more frequently and tailored to some baseline characteristics and adapt to progress
BEHAVIORALTailored (TO)Messages are sent more frequently and tailored to some baseline characteristics

Timeline

Start date
2019-05-24
Primary completion
2021-02-18
Completion
2023-11-01
First posted
2018-10-04
Last updated
2021-06-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03695653. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.