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Alcohol brief interventions :. Extending the reach Professor Iain K Crombie. Alcohol brief interventions. substantial evidence of effectiveness 10-20 minutes of encouragement and goal setting usually delivered by a doctor tested on middle-aged men usually in healthcare settings
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Alcohol brief interventions: Extending the reach Professor Iain K Crombie
Alcohol brief interventions • substantial evidence of effectiveness • 10-20 minutes of encouragement and goal setting • usually delivered by a doctor • tested on middle-aged men • usually in healthcare settings • reduce weekly consumption
Aim: To reduce harmful drinking across social groups • Non-healthcare settings • high risk groups • currently not covered • Two stage process • funded feasibility study • test study design • full RCT • assess intervention effectiveness
Mortality rates for chronic liver disease Audit Scotland, 2007
Drinking and disadvantaged men: 25-44 years • hard to reach group • seldom attend health care • low participation in research • intervention requirements • community delivery • engage • feasible national rollout
Feasibility study • text message intervention • low demand on participants • computerised delivery • recruitment / retention • limitations of the intervention delivery • amount of information • opportunities for interaction • monitoring intervention delivery • non-contact intervention
Recruitment strategies • 2 recruitment strategies • GP registers • community outreach • Evidence-based techniques to increase recruitment • financial incentives • multiple attempts at contact • personalised approaches, assurances of confidentiality Recruitment target: 60 - Achieved 67
Intervention development Focus groups Design team
Focus group findings • experience of alcohol harms widespread • increase salience • mature drinker role • recognition of social expectations • employer, partner, family • utilise discrepancy • binge drinking and mature drinker role • weekend binge drinking • tailor text messages • don’t preach
Causal model forbehaviour change Engage participants Increase salience of harms Address drinking discrepancy Identify benefits of reduced consumption Emphasise views of others Set goals
What’s the main reason U drink? It’s a Habit To feel better To have fun To cope To wash down your chips. Text me your answer! • Engagement • humour • reflection • interactivity
Andy from Dundee says –“I cut back on drinking because my father-in-law died of it”. What would be a good reason for U to cut back? Text me back! Motivate change
Can U think of someone who’d be happy if U made a change! What would U hear them say? Please text me your answer! Views of others Reinforce intention to change
Content of the responses • Reasons for drinking less • “I really wanna stay out of trouble and not become the person I can be after a few too many” • Money saved • “£200 a month or more easy. That would be on carry outs and the pub.” • Buy with money saved • “Trek 2.5 road bike - cost £1650.00 RR” • Benefits to others • “My dad. Its good ur no phoning me for a lift at 2am!”
Summary • exceeded recruitment target • recruited harmful drinkers • 96% retention • outcomes measured • theoretically and empirically based text messages • in 160 characters • high level of engagement • key components behaviour change strategy
Revisions for the full trial • Extended and modified intervention • 36 texts 110 texts • self-efficacy • action planning • long term maintenance • Multi-centre trial underway • 825 men recruited • high level engagement • outcome assessment underway
Young women • binge drinking in social groups • high risk of harms • effectiveness of individual level intervention • group intervention • capitalise on support structure • delivered by lay peers • acceptability • low cost for roll out
Key feasibility issues • develop intervention • recruit and train lay peers • recruit drinking groups • fidelity of delivery • follow-up
Focus groups • established patterns of dinking • calculated hedonism • strong motives for drinking • fun, socialising • group encouragement to drink • marked resistance to change
Intervention: Looking good, feeling great • Three session tailored intervention (HAPA) • Organised around fun activities • Promoting motivation • Mocktailpreparation • Setting goals • Make-up demonstration • Action and coping plans • Relaxation/ massage
Lay peers • recruitment • targeted at peers • extended selection process • training • techniques from Motivational Interviewing • role play: delivery of intervention • user friendly manual • findings • motivated peers recruited • role play extended
Participant recruitment • Marketing campaign • local radio, buses, flyers, posters, NHS/university intranets • Outreach strategy • community centres, shopping centres, gyms, parks, university, college • Findings • target of 24 groups recruited
Delivering the intervention • variety of venues • hotel, cocktail bar, community centres, university • professionals • mixologist, beauty therapist, relaxation therapist • findings • 92% completed 3 sessions
Assessing fidelity of intervention delivery • Monitoring • recorded sessions • flipcharts collated • feedback with lay trainers • Findings • participants enthusiastic • decisional balance • advantages of less bingeing • 92% set goals to reduce consumption • no shots
Follow-up • very challenging • participants willing, coordination hard • multiple attempts at contact • multiple methods • findings • 86% completed follow-up
Post-study evaluation • acceptability • more fun than expected • non-judgemental approach valued • group format important • benefits • insight into extent of drinking • reduced drinking more money, more time • goal setting used for other activities
Revisions for the full trial • Multi-centre • four cities • coordination and support • Over-recruit lay peers • replacements • Research assistants to organise sessions • facebook • Follow up • keep in regular contact
Alcohol and Obese Men • HTA feasibility study • obese men who drink > 21 units per week • motivation of weight loss to reduce drinking • sustained behaviour change
Challenges • recruitment • obesity is a pejorative term • measure height and weight • face to face session • venues • deliver by lay people • recruitment and training • intervention design • motivate and maintain
Approaches • Literature review • self-image and function • weight loss groups unpopular • Stakeholder interviews • recruitment, venues • Recruitment techniques • modified from text message study • Focus groups
Focus groups • benefits of weight loss • lose beer belly • improved function – football with the kids • weight consequences of alcohol • makes them eat more • unaware of calories in alcohol • barriers • sociability/ enjoyment • exercise is the preferred solution
Intervention strategy • Face to face session • motivation • drinking above guidelines • very overweight • contribution of alcohol to weight • Text messages • encourage goal setting/ action planning • promote maintenance of reduced drinking
Current status • intervention developed • lay people recruited and trained • pilot intervention sessions successful • recruitment began 02/03/15
Extending the reach • high risk groups • tailored recruitment • intervention features • strong empirical and theoretical basis • levers for behaviour change • low demand, enjoyable • suitable for national roll-out • innovative delivery mechanisms • electronic media • group interventions • trained lay people