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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT04776278
NA

Behavioral Economic and Wellness-based Approaches for Reducing Alcohol Use and Consequences Among Emerging Adults

Sponsor: University of Memphis

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate an intervention approach for non-student emerging adults that attempts to reduce alcohol use by decreasing stress and increasing engagement in positive and goal-directed activities that provide meaningful alternatives to alcohol use.

Official title: Behavioral Economic and Wellness-based Approaches for Reducing Alcohol Use and Consequences Among Diverse Non-student Emerging Adults

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 29 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

525

Start Date

2022-01-17

Completion Date

2026-05-01

Last Updated

2025-09-10

Healthy Volunteers

No

Conditions

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Brief Alcohol Intervention (BAI)

This session includes a discussion related to harm reduction and the participant's autonomy to make decisions about the information provided in the session; an alcohol use decisional balance exercise; personalized alcohol-related feedback, and goal-setting. Elements included in the feedback are: (a) comparison of the participant's perception of how much he or she drinks and actual norms, (b) a comparison of the participant's alcohol consumption vs. norms, (c) an estimate of the participant's peak blood alcohol content in the past month, (d) alcohol-related problems experienced, (e) money spent on alcohol, and (f) calories consumed from alcohol. Participants discuss the personalized feedback with the clinician and review protective behavioral strategies if he or she indicates interest.

BEHAVIORAL

Substance-free Activity Session (SFAS)

The SFAS session includes : a) discussion of life goals, b) discussion of associations between alcohol and drug use, goals, and substance-free activities; c) a graph depicting the participant's ratings of the relative importance of various aspects of their life and how their actions in the past week have been consistent with these priorities; d) personalized feedback on recent time allocation to activities across life domains, and a discussion of any changes the participant would like to make; e) feedback on symptoms of stress, anxiety and discussion of adaptive coping strategies; f) discussion of enjoyable substance-free activities and hobbies and substance-free recreational activity suggestions tailored to individual's interests and neighborhood; g) a goal setting exercise for specific behavior change plans; h) a Future Thinking Writing Exercise. Participants will receive weekly text-message based booster prompts for four weeks after their SFAS session.

BEHAVIORAL

Relaxation Training (RT)

The clinician will begin by establishing the credibility of the session by providing the participant with the rationale that developing relaxation or mindfulness training strategies can reduce stress and enhance wellness. The clinician will then lead the participant through a diaphragmatic breathing exercise, followed by a progressive muscle RT protocol, and then a brief breath-counting (mindfulness) exercise. The session will conclude with a brief discussion of additional stress and anxiety management strategies (e.g., apps to monitor heartrate and breathing). Participants will be asked about their reaction to the techniques and, if interested, encouraged to commit to a specific plan for practicing these techniques.

OTHER

Education Control

This condition will not include any clinical contact other than a brief (2-3 minute) discussion with the research assistant (RA) who completed the assessment session and who will describe the educational handout. This condition is meant to approximate a low-threshold public health-level approach to providing referral information and some of the content included in the BAI+SFAS condition but without any of the personalized information or MI/clinical contact. Thus, participants will receive information on risks associated with alcohol and drug misuse, strategies for reducing use/problems, and strategies for managing stress and setting and follow-through with achievable goals. The handout will also include links to hotlines, websites, and apps related to these domains. This condition will not include booster contact.

Locations (1)

University of Memphis

Memphis, Tennessee, United States