Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03889873

Evaluating Change in Drinking Identity as a Mechanism for Reducing Hazardous Drinking - Study 2

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
329 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Washington · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 25 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose of the proposed research is to evaluate whether changes in drinking identity (DI; how much one associates one's self with drinking) can reduce hazardous drinking (HD; heavy alcohol use and negative alcohol-related consequences) among current college students. The study seeks to explore whether manipulating DI among participants will have changes in self-efficacy, craving, and HD. If such an effect can be found, DI may be a mechanism for HD behavior change and will allow researchers to develop and improve interventions aimed at HD behaviors in high-risk young adults.

Detailed description

Experimentally manipulate DI to increase self-efficacy, decrease alcohol craving and reduce HD. We will recruit 328 student hazardous drinkers and use an expressive writing task to manipulate their DI, the salience of their social network, and their writing perspective. The last factor is included because writing in a self-distanced (3rd person) vs. self-immersed (1st person) perspective has been linked to greater cognitive control. We will evaluate the manipulation's immediate effects on DI, self-efficacy, and craving. Participants will also complete two weekly follow-up "booster" sessions. Longer-term effects on DI, self-efficacy, craving and HD will be evaluated at additional 2-week, 1-month, and 3-month follow-ups. With the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, new subject enrollment was paused between March and September 2020. In light of the continued COVID-19 pandemic, the study team made the decision to move the in-person, lab-based session (where participants completed the writing task) to online sessions as of October 2020. With the move to online sessions, we have discontinued the cue reactivity task and the accompanying craving assessment. Inclusion criteria have shifted slightly -- we now explicitly require participants to be currently living in Washington State (this criterion was implicit in our previous criteria and procedures) . The structure of the study otherwise remains the same.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALNarrative WritingAn writing task in which participants are given a description of a possible future self (that varies 3 factors: topic; drinking vs. smartphone; perspective: 1st vs. 3rd-person; and social network: specifically asked to be included vs. not specifically asked to be included). Participants are asked to imagine that future self vividly and to write about the thoughts and feeling describe themselves and their experiences, the characteristics they hope or wish they will ideally possess, the characteristics that they would need to have and the roles they will take on or things they will be doing. Participants are given 20 minutes to think and write. They will write and think about the same future on each of three lab-sessions (which occur at 1-week intervals).

Timeline

Start date
2019-04-18
Primary completion
2021-02-26
Completion
2021-06-07
First posted
2019-03-26
Last updated
2021-10-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03889873. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.