Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice Clinical Trial
Official title:
Promoting Alcohol-related Attitudinal and Behavioural Change Amongst Adolescents Through Internet Intervention: A Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial
Objectives The aims of this study are to test the effectiveness of an online quiz competition
in changing adolescents' alcohol-related attitudes and behaviour and to explore the
fe¬asibility of using Internet viral marketing to reach a significant number of adolescents.
Hypotheses to be tested
1. The present online quiz competition is more effective in changing adolescents'
alcohol-related attitudes and behaviours than traditional health promotion.
2. Internet viral marketing is effective in reaching a significant number of adolescents.
Design and subjects The study will constitute a cluster randomised controlled trial for 20
secondary schools (6,720 Grade 7 to 9 students). Schools will be randomised to intervention
or control arm with equal likelihood. Students in intervention schools will be invited to
take part in the Internet campaign whereas those in control schools will receive relevant
promotional leaflets.
Study instrument An alcohol attitude and behaviour survey will be compiled with reference to
standardised, validated instruments.
Intervention Participants will log into the website and answer alcohol-related
multiple-choice questions. They will be encouraged to promulgate the campaign to others.
Main outcome measures Alcohol-related attitude and behaviour will be the primary outcome
measures.
Data analysis Multilevel regressions will mainly be used to evaluate the difference in
attitude and behaviour.
Expected results The results of the proposed study will provide evidence on the efficacy of
an Internet intervention in modifying adolescents' attitudes and behaviour and guide further
investigation into the prevention of and intervention in such risk behaviours as underage
drinking.
Intervention Arm: Internet Quiz Competition Campaign
The intervention is designed based on the Theory of Planned Behavior. Participants will gain
alcohol-related knowledge through the participation of the intervention, which would in turn
alter their attitude concerning drinking and alcohol use. According to the Theory of Planned
Behavior, such knowledge and attitude improvement would reduce participants' intention to
drink and thus change or prevent their drinking behavior. To promote the intervention, the
investigators will conduct a briefing session and a demonstration session for all eligible
students in participating schools in the intervention arm. Campaign promotion brochures and
posters will be distributed within those schools.
Campaign Design
Participants of the campaign will receive a referral code from those who refer them to the
online quiz website; starters of the campaigns will receive the code directly from the
research team. These referral codes, sets of 8-digit numbers, will be unique to each user and
used to track the referral process. During registration, participants will be asked to
provide basic demographic information and their referral code. After registration, their
baseline attitudes and behavior will be assessed using the Alcohol Attitudes and Behavior
survey.
The campaign will last for 30 days, starting from the day of the school promotion session.
The aim of the competition from the participants' perspective will be to obtain the highest
score possible to win a prize. They will have two ways of doing so.
The first way will be to answer the online quiz questions. The po-ints gained in this way
will constitute the "answer score." Alcohol-related multiple-choice questions will be
presented on the webpage one by one in random non-repeated order. Each correct answer will
result in 10 points being awarded to the user's account. Giving an incorrect answer or
skipping a question will not result in any points being deducted. Users will be shown the
correct answer immediately after they have chosen their own. The purpose of this design is to
promote correct alcohol-related knowledge and attitudes.
The second way of accruing points to obtain a high score will be to make referrals, a step
designed to enhance the effectiveness of the Internet viral marketing strategy. Upon a
successful referral, the referrer will receive all of the answer scores of their direct
referrals (which will constitute their "referral score"). To minimize the chance of
self-referrals, users will receive no points from making a successful referral. Furthermore,
to ensure campaign competitiveness, the referral scores of lower-level users will not be
added to starters' accounts. The answer score and referral score will be summed into a total
score that will be used for prize distribution. Figure 2 illustrates the point system.
The campaign website will be based on our previous Internet viral marketing campaign, which
has shown satisfactory user acceptance. The investigators will make necessary modifications
such as enhancing the user interface and preventing duplicate registrations for our study.
Setting the quiz questions will be guided by the Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM) of
persuasion. The quiz questions will be designed by youth volunteers to convey accurate and
interesting facts based on international and local sources such as World Health Organization
and Hong Kong Department of Health reports and research articles from peer-reviewed journals.
The questions will be concrete, specific, and of personal relevance to the participants so
that they will be more likely to adopt a "central path" of message processing, which the ELM
predicts will induce a more sustainable effect. An experienced clinician and a research
assistant will examine every set of 100 questions and discuss them with the question setters
to ensure language accuracy and information reliability. This process will be repeated until
a total of 1000 quiz questions are generated. Finally, all of the questions will be
proofread, refined, and approved by a local alcohol research team from the School of Public
Health, University of Hong Kong.
Control Arm: Information Package
A comprehensive package on alcohol-related information will be distributed to all students in
the control arm. The information package will contain both printed promotional leaflets from
the Department of Health and an electronic guideline for understanding alcohol-related
information. The electronic guideline sent through the school intranet system would serve as
a unidirectional knowledge transfer medium, which would include a brief summary of the most
recent research regarding alcohol and a comprehensive list of relevant website and
information sources. The investigators will use these relevant websites and information
sources in setting the quiz questions for the intervention arm. As a result, both
intervention and control arms could have comparable accessibility to alcohol-related
information and the sole contrast between the two groups would be the method of presentation
(interactive online quiz competition vs unidirectional information package).
Due to the referral nature of the Internet campaign, it is possible that a small portion of
students in the control group school would be referred to participate in the quiz
competition, which could in turn dilute the effect size estimate. As a result, the
investigators will ask the students in the control group in the postintervention survey
whether they have participated in the Internet quiz competition campaign and exclude those
who participate in subsequent data analysis.
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