Alcoholism Clinical Trial
Official title:
An Internet-based Intervention for Problem Drinking
The main aim of this randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the efficacy of an
Internet-delivered self-help intervention for problem drinkers in the general population.
Adult problem drinkers with home access to the Internet will be recruited from the CAMH
Monitor. Subjects will be randomly assigned to receive a website address where they can
obtain personalized feedback about their drinking, or to a no intervention control group.
Three-month and six-month follow-up surveys will be conducted by mail to assess drinking
over the following three month periods. Collaterals will be requested and interviewed after
the six-month follow-up. Subjects will be paid $40.00 and collaterals will be paid $20.00
for their participation. Drinking at three- and six-months will be compared between the
groups. Subjects in the control group will be provided with the website address following
the six-month follow-up.
Self-change interventions have great potential to aid the many problem drinkers who do not
seek formal treatment. Because self-change interventions circumvent some of the barriers
associated with traditional treatment services, they may help reduce the harm associated
with alcohol abuse among untreated individuals, whose number far exceeds that of the
minority who ever access formal alcohol treatment programs. Self-change/self-help materials
have the added advantage of being relatively inexpensive, increasing their potential for
wide distribution and attendant public health impact. The Internet is one promising route
for distributing such materials to a large segment of the population. Three-quarters of
Canadians and Americans use the Internet, including a large number who seek health-related
information on line. Drinking self-change websites abound on the Internet, but because none
has been scientifically evaluated it is unknown whether such sites do more good than harm.
By being the first large scale, controlled evaluation, this project intends to advance the
science of Internet-mediated intervention as well as provide valuable public health
information on the effectiveness of Internet-delivered self-change materials. Specifically,
the major objective of this project is to conduct a randomized controlled evaluation of the
impact of an Internet-based self-help intervention for problem drinkers in the general
population.
Participants will be recruited through the ongoing general population survey - the CAMH
Monitor (N = 170 after attrition), and will be randomly assigned to be sent a World Wide Web
page Internet address and password for the personalized alcohol feedback program or to a no
intervention control group. Three and six-month drinking outcomes will be compared between
experimental conditions using structural equation modeling.
The primary hypothesis is that respondents in the Internet personalized alcohol feedback
condition will display significantly improved drinking outcomes at three and six-month
follow-ups as compared to respondents in the no intervention control condition. Secondary
hypotheses will address the mediating or moderating role of perceived drinking norms,
perceived risk and the problem drinker's social reasons for drinking.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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