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Behaviour change in 160 characters: a novel brief alcohol intervention for disadvantaged men

Williams, Brian; Crombie, Iain K; Falconer, Donald W; Irvine, Linda; Williams, Brian; Ricketts, Ian W; Humphris, Gerry; Norrie, John; Rice, Peter; Slane, Peter W

Authors

Brian Williams

Iain K Crombie

Donald W Falconer

Linda Irvine

Brian Williams

Ian W Ricketts

Gerry Humphris

John Norrie

Peter Rice

Peter W Slane



Abstract

Background
Men from disadvantaged areas experience substantial alcohol-related harm. However such men can be missed by the conventional method of delivering brief alcohol interventions through primary care. This feasibility study designed and evaluated the potential of a brief alcohol intervention delivered by text message. The intervention aims to reduce the frequency of binge drinking.
Methods
Disadvantaged men aged 25–44 years who had two or more episodes of binge drinking (≥8 units of alcohol in a single session) in the preceding month were recruited and randomised to receive either text messages designed to encourage moderated drinking (intervention group) or general health messages (control group). We report here on the feasibility of study methods. Two recruitment strategies were used: general practice registers and community outreach. The intervention drew on literature on alcohol brief interventions, text message studies, communication theory, and behaviour change theories and techniques. Tailored text messages were developed through focus groups with disadvantaged men.
Findings
Both recruitment strategies proved successful, with 67 men recruited (target=60). At baseline many men had regular heavy drinking episodes interspersed with several days of sobriety. About a quarter of men had frequent episodes of failing to remember the night before. Men recruited through community outreach drank more than double that of men recruited through general practices (mean 137·1 units per month [SD 134·9] vs 61·7 [50·0], p=0·006). More men recruited through community outreach than through practices had greater than 5 binge drinking days per month (17/30 [57%] vs 6/37 [17%], p=0·02). Retention at follow-up was 96% (64/67). Extensive process evaluation showed that 1053 (95%) of 1108 text messages were successfully delivered to participants' phones. In addition, a high level of engagement with text messages was noted, with 30 (88%) of 34 participants in the intervention group responding to messages that asked questions. Content analysis of responses showed engagement with key components of the behaviour change strategy. Post-study evaluation showed high levels of satisfaction with the intervention.
Interpretation
Disadvantaged men were successfully recruited and retained in an alcohol intervention study. A theoretically and empirically based intervention was successfully delivered by text message. Furthermore, the messages were well received and elicited the types of response intended. This feasibility study suggests that the intervention offers a low-cost method of reaching large numbers of hazardous drinkers.

Citation

Williams, B., Crombie, I. K., Falconer, D. W., Irvine, L., Williams, B., Ricketts, I. W., Humphris, G., Norrie, J., Rice, P., & Slane, P. W. Behaviour change in 160 characters: a novel brief alcohol intervention for disadvantaged men

Presentation Conference Type Conference Abstract
Online Publication Date Nov 19, 2014
Publication Date Nov 19, 2014
Deposit Date Jun 5, 2017
Journal The Lancet
Print ISSN 0140-6736
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 384
Issue S26
Pages S26
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736%2814%2962152-8
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/837657





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