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Development and Evaluation of a Theory and Evidence-based Intervention to Reduce Hazardous Alcohol Consumption Among Treatment Seeking Smokers
Sponsor: Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Summary
This study will evaluate the implementation of a fully automated, direct-to-patient digital alcohol intervention embedded within the STOP Program's patient portal. The STOP Program is a large-scale, population-based smoking cessation initiative operating in over 300 primary care settings across Ontario. It provides free nicotine replacement therapy and behavioural support through a digital portal that facilitates patient self-enrollment and systematic data collection. As part of this study, patients who score ≥8 on the AUDIT-C will be offered the opportunity to view a brief intervention (BI). Those with an AUDIT-C score ≥10 will receive a cautionary message along with tailored content designed to help reduce hazardous drinking. The intervention was developed based on a rapid review (PROSPERO: CRD42023445492) and a Delphi consensus process using the Behaviour Change Techniques Taxonomy V1. Key components include personalized feedback, normative comparisons, reflective prompts, and actionable behaviour change strategies. For patients scoring above a clinical threshold, additional messaging encourages caution regarding abrupt cessation and suggests consulting a healthcare provider. Our primary outcome is acceptance of the new online resource.
Official title: Evaluation of a Theory Informed Intervention to Reduce Hazardous Alcohol Consumption Among Treatment Seeking Smokers
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
Any - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
77
Start Date
2025-11-20
Completion Date
2026-12-31
Last Updated
2025-11-14
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Brief alcohol intervention
The intervention is a prompt that that appears as an alert message in the patient portal, recommending the alcohol intervention.