Alcohol Consumption Clinical Trial
This research seeks to evaluate expressive writing as a novel intervention for problem
drinking among college students. The vast majority of individually focused brief
interventions targeting college drinking have focused on personalized feedback approaches and
recent innovations have largely been limited to finer distinctions of these, which require
assessment and programming for implementation. The present research proposes expressive
writing as a novel alternative, which has been used extensively in other domains but not as
an alcohol intervention strategy.
H1a: Participants writing about negative drinking events will show reduced drinking and
drinking-related negative consequences relative to students in the neutral control group.
H1b: Participants writing about distressing non-alcohol events will show increased
psychological wellbeing relative to students in the neutral control group.
H1c: Participants writing about negative drinking events will show reduced drinking and
consequences compared with an empirically-supported brief intervention (i.e., PNF). This is
an exploratory hypothesis.
H2a: Alcohol narratives will have stronger effects on alcohol outcomes relative to distress
narratives.
H2b: Alcohol guilt narratives will have the strongest effect on alcohol outcomes relative to
all other conditions.
H3a: Expression of guilt, assessed by self-report and by content coding with LIWC, will
mediate intervention effects on drinking outcomes.
H3b: Change thought, assessed by LIWC coding, will mediate intervention effects on drinking.
The current research builds on previous research targeting heavy drinking among college
students. A large volume of research has provided an impressive data base supporting one type
of individually-focused alcohol intervention for this population (i.e., personalized
feedback). The success of this paradigm has probably contributed to the dearth of
consideration of alternative paradigms. Expressive writing is one such alternative, which has
received extensive support in other domains but has only recently been considered as a
potential intervention for heavy drinking. The preliminary data examining this approach is
promising and provides a firm foundation for this efficacy trial. Further, this research
incorporates novel theoretical constructs including the specific focus on guilt in expressive
writing content as well as "change thought," as an analogue to the mechanism presumed to
underlie motivational treatments for alcohol and other substance use disorders. The
investigators plan to employ similar methods which have been used successfully in other large
NIAAA funded trials evaluating brief interventions for heavy drinking college students.
This research consists of an intervention study to evaluate expressive writing as a brief
intervention in reducing drinking and improving psychological well-being among college
students. Participation in the study involves completion of a screening assessment, a
baseline assessment, the intervention procedure, post-intervention assessment, and follow-up
assessments at 1-, 3-, 6-, and 12-months. Heavy drinking college students (N = 600) will be
randomly assigned to one of six conditions based on the 2 (alcohol vs. distress topics) × 2
(guilt vs. no guilt focus) + 1 (neutral control) + 1 (personalized normative feedback)
design. Before completing the baseline survey, students will be randomly assigned to one of
six study conditions, five of which involve writing during three sessions over the course of
one month. Specifically, participants will be assigned to write about a heavy drinking event,
a heavy drinking event that elicited guilt, a distressing event, a distressing event that
elicited guilt, or their first day of college (neutral control condition).
Participants randomly assigned to the PNF condition will receive traditional personalized
normative feedback regarding how their drinking compares with other students of the same
gender at the university. The norms will come from a large recently completed alcohol survey
conducted at the University of Houston examining social norms and alcohol prevention
(R01AA014576). To maintain consistency across conditions, participants in the PNF condition
will still come into the lab three times. They will receive feedback during the first
intervention session and will be asked to complete the same narrative prompts as the neutral
control condition for their second and third session. For individuals in the expressive
writing conditions, there will be three narrative prompts to complete every week for three
weeks, the first of which will occur following the baseline assessment. All baseline
assessments, narrative intervention assignments, and immediate post-tests for all conditions
will be conducted in-lab. All other assessments including screening and follow-up assessments
will be completed remotely by web. The rationale for including a personalized normative
feedback condition is to be able to compare the efficacy of expressive writing interventions
with existing brief alcohol interventions. Thus, the present design allows not only for
evaluation of efficacy relative to a control condition but also will evaluate comparative
efficacy relative to an existing empirically-supported brief alcohol intervention.
Aims will be evaluated using multi-level regression analyses, often referred to as
Hierarchical Linear Modeling (HLM) or mixed-effects modeling. With respect to evaluating main
effects of experimental conditions on drinking, each participant will provide baseline,
post-intervention, 1-month, 3-month, 6-month, and 12-month follow-up data. Hypotheses will be
tested using specific contrast vectors, using a general linear hypothesis framework. The
study consists of a (2×2+1+1) design, represented as a factorial design with the addition of
a control group that will write about their first day of school and a computer-based PNF
comparison group. Hypotheses will be tested with contrasts corresponding to the questions of
interest. The first two hypotheses represent contrasts between the alcohol narrative
conditions and the neutral control condition (H1a) and between the guilt narrative conditions
and the neutral control condition (H1b). In examining these hypotheses, the investigators
will construct two dummy coded variables reflecting alcohol versus non-alcohol narratives
conditions and between guilt and non-guilt narrative conditions with the reference group
being the neutral control condition. Thus, the PNF group will not be included in the tests of
these two hypotheses. Dependent variables will include alcohol outcomes for H1a and
psychological well-being for H1b. For these analyses each participant will provide up to 5
repeated measures (i.e., baseline, 1-month, 3-months, 6-months, and 12-months), yielding up
to 3000 Level 1 cases (repeated-measures) across 600 Level 2 cases.
The investigators will also evaluate mediators of intervention effects. Additionally, the
investigators will follow procedures to assess mediation. Mediation will test indirect
effects using the AB products method where A will represent effects of intervention contrasts
by time interactions on mediators (expression of guilt and change thought). B will represent
the associations of mediators on subsequent drinking outcomes. Both A and B paths will
control for baseline outcomes. Evaluation of hypotheses regarding the moderation effect will
test whether individual differences in guilt-proneness interact with intervention contrasts.
These will be tested by expanding the above model to add main effects and product terms of
proposed moderators with intervention contrasts.
Power analyses focus on estimating a sample size large enough to detect "true" effects,
thereby avoiding Type II errors. Sample size estimates were obtained for intervention
contrasts. Necessary sample sizes were assessed via sample size and power equations for
normally distributed outcomes. Effect-sizes and variance components were based on preliminary
studies, and power was set at 0.80 for all estimates. Power was estimated using the Optimal
Design software program. The investigators anticipate intervention effects relative to the
neutral control condition on drinking to be in the range of delta =.30-.40). Based on the
proposed sample size of 500 (~PNF not included in H1a and H1b), given five assessment points,
the investigators anticipate the ability to detect main effects of intervention contrasts
with power=.80. Considering maximum anticipated attrition rates of 20% the investigators will
have .80 power to detect effects sizes of delta = .28 and greater.
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