Alcohol Use Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Alcohol Awareness Peer Leaders (AAPL): A Multidisciplinary, Culturally Based Training Program for Underserved Minority Health Professional Students to Increase Alcohol Screening and Intervention
Problematic alcohol use can lead to worse social and health related consequences for underserved minorities, requiring urgent intervention. By training underserved minority health professional students, this proposed project will develop and test the feasibility of an innovative and culturally tailored intervention for adults studying at a minority institution, with specific focus on alcohol screening, brief intervention, and referral of treatment (SBIRT). This proposal is expected to have a positive impact on alcohol reduction and prevention for minority communities
Problematic alcohol use, including alcohol use disorders (AUD) and high episodic drinking (HED), remains a public health crisis among college students, particularly those from underserved minority groups. Less likely to disclose alcohol use, underserved minority college students participate in riskier drinking, attributed to multiple social factors, including racial/ethnic discrimination, financial strain, and neighborhood disadvantage. Faced with worse alcohol health-related consequences, effective interventions to reduce alcohol use among this population is critically needed. To reduce alcohol-related health disparities, the investigators aim to develop a public health-based, comprehensive program (Alcohol Awareness Peer Leaders) that will train underserved minority non-traditional health professional students to conduct alcohol screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) by using a culturally sensitive approach and screening tool (Rapid Alcohol Problems Screen - RAPS4-QF). By utilizing a culturally adapted SBIRT curriculum, AAPLs will be able to deliver alcohol education and messaging to motivate alcohol risk reduction and decrease in consumption for non-traditional college students studying at a predominantly minority academic institution in an underserved area. The Andersen Healthcare Utilization Model will be utilized to guide this intervention. This theoretically and culturally tailored proposed project is evidence-informed and promising for underserved minority college students and will be advanced through the following three aims: 1) Using an explanatory-sequential mixed methods design, examine a) alcohol consumption and HED patterns, b) attitudes toward alcohol use, c) social and environmental factors, and d) alcohol-related consequences among minority health professional students, 2) Through training of minority health professional students as Alcohol Awareness Peer Leaders (AAPLs), assess the acceptability and relevance of a peer-based SBIRT that was culturally-tailored based on Aim 1 findings, and 3) To compare the feasibility and effectiveness of delivering a culturally-tailored SBIRT using RAPS4-QF by AAPLs by race/ethnicity, drinking status (abstainer vs. drinker), and adverse life experiences. These outcomes will result in the training of 208 underserved minority AAPLs who will conduct culturally competent and evidence-based alcohol screening, brief intervention, and treatment referral for over 2000 students. The result of this innovative proposal will produce future healthcare professionals who will be a valuable community resource for underserved areas as they can continue to decrease alcohol health disparities for underrepresented minority populations, inducing sustainability. ;
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