Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03608787 |
Other study ID # |
R44AA024992 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
September 1, 2017 |
Est. completion date |
August 31, 2019 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2020 |
Source |
RRF Field Services LLC |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The Responsible Retailing Forum ("RRF") seeks to develop a new intervention, Stop Service to
Obviously- Impaired Patrons ("S-STOP"), to reduce the incidence and harm associated with
overservice of alcohol. Modeled after RRF's effective program to reduce alcohol sales to
minors using Mystery Shopper feedback on staff ID-checking conduct, SSTOP would (1) conduct
"Pseudo-Intoxicated" Mystery Shop" ("P-I/MS") inspections of serving establishments,
employing actors who seek to purchase an alcohol beverage while showing obvious signs of
intoxication, (2) provide licensees with confidential feedback on actual staff conduct and a
video link to view the behavior of the P-I/MS that visited their establishments, (3) provide
staff with brief online training in the recognition and skillful refusal of service to
intoxicated patrons, and (4) provide communities with a measure of the prevalence of
overservice. The proposed study will: (1) determine the effectiveness of S-STOP in improving
recognition and refusal to serve an obviously- impaired customer. To do this, we will
implement S-STOP in 10 pairs of demographically matched college and university communities,
employing a cross-over design. After a 3-month baseline, we will implement S- STOP in one
community in each pair (Cohort 1), while the second community serves as a control (Cohort 2).
After 6 months, we will end S-STOP in Cohort 1 communities but continue inspections to
measure the effects of decay; and we will begin S-STOP in Cohort 2. (2) examine how licensees
utilize the S-STOP program and the extent to which utilization moderates the effectiveness of
the program. To do this, we will measure the number and percentage of managers who visit the
S-STOP website and register their staff for training, measure the number of staff that
complete the training, and conduct analyses to investigate the dose-response relationship
between utilization of the S-STOP program and likelihood of overservice. (3) investigate why
some owner/managers did not participate in S-STOP. To achieve this, we will interview 20
owner-managers who did not access the S-STOP website.
Description:
The Responsible Retailing Forum (RRF) has developed a community-based program - S-STOP (Stop
Service To Obviously-Impaired Patrons) - that assists communities and their on-premises
alcohol establishments to address the problems of over-service of alcoholic beverages. S-STOP
is a six-month program, administered by RRF, which:
- Conducts Pseudo-Intoxicated Mystery Shop (P-I/MS) visits at on-premises establishments
employing actors who seek to be served an alcoholic beverage while showing obvious signs
of intoxication;
- Provides on-premises owner-operators and managers with confidential feedback on staff
conduct and an Internet link to a video that shows how the P-I/MS that visited their
establishments typically would have behaved;
- Provides resources to licensees to assist them in complying with over-service laws;
- Provides on-premises staff with a brief online training module on how to recognize and
skillfully refuse service to potentially intoxicated patrons;
- Provides community stakeholders with aggregated data on the prevalence of alcohol
over-service in their communities.
In this project, we will conduct and evaluate S-STOP in selected college and university
communities in California.
Specific Aim 1 of this project is to demonstrate the effectiveness of S-STOP in reducing
over-service. To achieve this, RRF will conduct a randomized control trial using a cross-over
design. We will:
- Identify ten pairs of demographically matched college/university communities for a total
of 20 communities and, in each community, recruit a minimum of 12 on-premises serving
establishments for participation in the project;
- Conduct 3 P-I/MS baseline inspections in all 20 communities to observe pre-intervention
over-service conduct;
- Randomly assign one community from each pair to receive S-STOP immediately (Cohort 1)
and the other (Cohort 2) to serve as a control group and then to receive S-STOP later;
- Implement S-STOP in Cohort 1 communities for 3 months and conduct P-I MS in Cohort 2
control communities with no feedback to the licensees or community. At the end of the 3
months, we will end S-STOP in Cohort 1 communities, but continue unreported P-I/MS and
begin S-STOP in Cohort 2 communities for 3 months;
Specific Aim 2 is to examine how licensees utilize the S-STOP program within their
establishments and the extent to which utilization moderates the effectiveness of the
program. To achieve this aim, we will:
- Measure the number and percentage of owner-operators and managers who visit the S-STOP
website to view the typical behavior of P-I/MS inspectors and register their staff for
training;
- Measure the number of staff who complete the S-STOP online training;
- Investigate the dose-response relationship between utilization of the S-STOP program
(number of owner-manager visits to S-STOP website; percentage of staff completing S-STOP
training) and likelihood of over-service as assessed by the P-I/MS.
Specific Aim 3 is to investigate why some owner/managers did not participate in S-STOP in
order to improve the program. We will:
• Interview 20 owner-managers who did not access the S-STOP website to find out why and
determine how the program might be modified to encourage their use of it.
The S-STOP program has three key components:
- Pseudo-Intoxicated Mystery Shops (P-I/MS). S-STOP conducts P-I/MS inspections by actors
who seek to be served an alcoholic beverage while showing obvious signs of impairment.
In order to appear realistic, the P-I/MSs act out levels of intoxication that staff of
bars, clubs, and restaurants are likely to encounter in the course of their jobs.
Owner-operators and managers are notified by mail that the S-STOP inspections recently
occurred and are provided with the results (refused service/did not refuse service) of
inspections in their own establishment. In addition, the mailings include materials
describing best practices for on-premises serving establishments, providing guidance on
what steps staff should take if a customer is obviously impaired and describing the
potential legal consequences for licensees and staff who serve alcohol to an
obviously-impaired customer. The mailings also provide a link to an internet site with a
video showing the typical behavior of actors during the P-I/MS visits and for
registration of staff for online training.
- Online refresher training in over-service recognition and refusal. S-STOP provides a
brief online training module for staff on how to recognize and skillfully refuse service
to potentially intoxicated patrons. The online training presents staff with scenarios
involving customers who have been drinking and models several ways in which staff can
firmly, but respectfully decline to serve. The video also reinforces the importance of
management supervision and reinforcement of responsible beverage service practices. The
online training lasts under 4 minutes and can be accessed using a mobile device, tablet,
or computer. Owners/managers will be notified when their staff members complete the
training.
- Community engagement. S-STOP also reports aggregated community-level P-I/MS results to
licensees, their industry partners, and public health, safety, and licensing agencies to
provide these community stakeholders with a measure of over-service prevalence and
changes in refusal rates in their communities over time.