Alcohol Drinking Clinical Trial
Official title:
PNF 2.0: A Novel, Gamified, Facebook-Integrated Personalized Normative Feedback Intervention to Reduce Alcohol Use and Negative Consequences Among Sexual Minority Women
Verified date | October 2022 |
Source | Loyola Marymount University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Sexual minority women in the United States are more likely to drink alcohol, engage in heavy drinking, and experience alcohol-related problems than are heterosexual women. Yet, to date, no evidence-based intervention or prevention efforts have been developed to reduce alcohol consumption among female sexual minority community members. The proposed research seeks to narrow the disparity in alcohol intervention research by examining an innovative gamified personalized normative feedback (PNF) intervention to reduce drinking among sexual minority women found to frequent social media sites and overestimate norms related to peers' general alcohol use and drinking to cope with sexual minority stigma. The newly developed GANDR (Gamified Alcohol Norm Discovery and Readjustment) PNF format takes the well-established core components of a PNF alcohol intervention and delivers these components within an inviting, social media inspired, culturally-tailored online competition. This incognito intervention format is designed to be more appealing, engaging, believable, positively received, and thus effective than standard web-based PNF. The version developed for sexual minority women delivers PNF on alcohol use and stigma-coping behaviors within the context of an online game about sexual minority female stereotypes. Following two introductory rounds of play by a large cohort of sexual minority women, a sub-sample of 500 sexual minority female drinkers will be invited to participate in an evaluation study. Study participants will be randomized to receive 1 of 3 unique sequences of feedback (i.e., Alcohol & Stigma-Coping, Alcohol & Control, or Control topics only) during 2 intervention rounds taking place over a 6-month period. The randomized feedback sequences and multiple rounds of play will allow the research team to evaluate whether PNF on alcohol use reduces sexual minority women's alcohol consumption and negative consequences relative to PNF on control topics (AIM 2: H1), examine whether providing PNF on stigma-coping behaviors in addition to alcohol use further reduces alcohol use and consequences beyond alcohol PNF alone (AIM 2: H2), and identify mediators and moderators of intervention effectiveness (AIM 3).
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 500 |
Est. completion date | October 10, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | October 10, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 21 Years to 55 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Registered for the online competition - Accept the competition's Terms of Service & Privacy Policy - Endorses a lesbian, bisexual, or queer female sexual identity - Is between the ages of 21 and 55 years - Has consumed 3 or more drinks on at least one occasion during the previous 2 months OR consumes alcohol 3 or more days per week - Lives in North America (US or Canada) - Does not have a partner or housemate participating - Accepts invitation and consents to participate in the Evaluation Study Exclusion Criteria: - Does not register for the online competition. - Does not accept the competition's Terms of Service & Privacy Policy - Is younger than 21 years of age or older than 55 years of age. - Has NOT consumed 3 or more drinks on at least one occasion during the previous 2 months AND drinks less than 3 days per week - Lives outside of North America - Has a partner or housemate participating - Declines invitation - Does not consent to participate in the Evaluation Study |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Loyola Marymount University | Los Angeles | California |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Loyola Marymount University | National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) |
United States,
Boyle SC, LaBrie JW. A Gamified, Social Media-Inspired, Web-Based Personalized Normative Feedback Alcohol Intervention for Lesbian, Bisexual, and Queer-Identified Women: Protocol for a Hybrid Trial. JMIR Res Protoc. 2021 Apr 16;10(4):e24647. doi: 10.2196/24647. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in Number of Drinks Per Week From Baseline to the the 2 Month Follow-up | At baseline and the 2 month follow-up, items assessing drinking days per week and average drinks per occasion were multiplied in order to compute number of drinks per week. These items come from the Frequency, Quantity, Max (FQM) measure. [Baer J, S. Etiology and secondary prevention of alcohol problems with young adults. Baer J S, Marlatt G A, McMahon R, J, editors. Newbury Park: Sage; 1993.] To compute the outcome, the 2 month measure of drinks per week was subtracted from the baseline measure of drinks per week such that a positive value indicates a decrease in consumption during this period and a negative value indicates an increase in consumption during this period. | 2 months | |
Primary | Change in Number of Drinks Per Week From Baseline to the 4 Month Follow-up | At baseline and the 4 month follow-up, items assessing drinking days per week and average drinks per occasion were multiplied in order to compute number of drinks per week. These items come from the Frequency, Quantity, Max (FQM) measure. [Baer J, S. Etiology and secondary prevention of alcohol problems with young adults. Baer J S, Marlatt G A, McMahon R, J, editors. Newbury Park: Sage; 1993.] To compute the outcome, the 4 month measure of drinks per week was subtracted from the baseline measure of drinks per week such that a positive value indicates a decrease in consumption during this period and a negative value indicates an increase in consumption during this period. | 4 months | |
Primary | Change in Peak Drinks on One Occasion From Baseline to the 2 Months Follow-up | At baseline and the 2 month follow-up, an item assessing the number of maximum drinks on one occasion from the Frequency, Quantity, Max (FQM) measure was used to assess peak drinks on one occasion over the past 30 days. [Baer J, S. Etiology and secondary prevention of alcohol problems with young adults. Baer J S, Marlatt G A, McMahon R, J, editors. Newbury Park: Sage; 1993.] To compute the outcome, the 2 month measure of peak drinks was subtracted from the baseline measure of peak drinks such that a positive value indicates a decrease in consumption during this period and a negative value indicates an increase in consumption during this period. | 2 months | |
Primary | Change in Peak Drinks on One Occasion From Baseline to the 4 Month Follow-up | At baseline and the 4 month follow-up, an item assessing the number of maximum drinks on one occasion from the Frequency, Quantity, Max (FQM) measure was used to assess peak drinks on one occasion over the past 30 days. [Baer J, S. Etiology and secondary prevention of alcohol problems with young adults. Baer J S, Marlatt G A, McMahon R, J, editors. Newbury Park: Sage; 1993.] To compute the outcome, the 4 month measure of peak drinks was subtracted from the baseline measure of peak drinks such that a positive value indicates a decrease in consumption during this period and a negative value indicates an increase in consumption during this period. | 4 months | |
Primary | Change in Number of Negative Alcohol-related Consequences From Baseline to the 2 Month Follow-up | At baseline and the 2 month follow-up, a single item assessed the number of negative alcohol-related consequences experienced out of a list of 8 common negative alcohol-related consequences. This item is adapted from Riley BB, Hughes TL, Wilsnack SC. Validating a hazardous drinking index in a sample of sexual minority women: Reliability, validity, and predictive accuracy. Substance Use and Misuse. 2017;52(1):43-51. doi: 10.1080/10826084.2016.1214150.] To compute the outcome, the 2 month measure of negative consequences was subtracted from the baseline measure of negative consequences such that a positive value indicates a decrease in consequences during this period and a negative value indicates an increase in consequences during this period. | 2 months | |
Primary | Change in Number of Negative Alcohol-related Consequences From Baseline to the 4 Month Follow-up | At baseline and the 4 month follow-up, a single item assessed the number of negative alcohol-related consequences experienced out of a list of 8 common negative alcohol-related consequences. This item is adapted from Riley BB, Hughes TL, Wilsnack SC. Validating a hazardous drinking index in a sample of sexual minority women: Reliability, validity, and predictive accuracy. Substance Use and Misuse. 2017;52(1):43-51. doi: 10.1080/10826084.2016.1214150.] To compute the outcome, the 4 month measure of negative consequences was subtracted from the baseline measure of negative consequences such that a positive value indicates a decrease in consequences during this period and a negative value indicates an increase in consequences during this period. | 4 months |
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