Acceptability and feasibility of a mobile behavioral economic health intervention to reduce alcohol use in adults in rural areas

Natalie D. Bayrakdarian , Erin E. Bonar , Isabelle Duguid , Lauren Hellman , Sarah Salino , Chelsea Wilkins , Mary Jannausch , James R. McKay , Michele Staton , Katherine Dollard , Inbal Nahum-Shani , Maureen A. Walton , Frederic C. Blow , Lara N. Coughlin
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Abstract

Background

At-risk alcohol use is associated with increased adverse health consequences, yet is undertreated in healthcare settings. People residing in rural areas need improved access to services; however, few interventions are designed to meet the needs of rural populations. Mobile interventions can provide feasible, low-cost, and scalable means for reaching this population and improving health, and behavioral economic approaches are promising.

Methods

We conducted a pilot randomized controlled trial focused on acceptability and feasibility of a mobile behavioral economic intervention for 75 rural-residing adults with at-risk alcohol use. We recruited participants from a large healthcare system and randomized them to one of four virtually-delivered conditions reflecting behavioral economic approaches: episodic future thinking (EFT), volitional choice (VC), both EFT and VC, or enhanced usual care control (EUC). The intervention included a telephone-delivered induction session followed by two weeks of condition-consistent ecological momentary interventions (EMIs; 2x/day) and ecological momentary assessments (EMAs; 1x/day). Participants completed assessments at baseline, post-intervention, and two-month follow-up, and provided intervention feedback.

Results

All participants completed the telephone-delivered session and elected to receive EMI messages. Average completion rate of EMAs across conditions was 92.9%. Among participants in active intervention conditions, 89.3% reported the induction session was helpful and 80.0% reported it influenced their future drinking. We also report initial alcohol use outcomes.

Discussion

The behavioral economic intervention components and trial procedures evaluated here appear to be feasible and acceptable. Next steps include determination of their efficacy to reduce alcohol use and public health harms.

减少农村地区成年人饮酒的移动行为经济健康干预措施的可接受性和可行性
背景高危饮酒与不良健康后果的增加有关,但在医疗机构中却未得到充分治疗。居住在农村地区的人们需要获得更多的服务;然而,很少有干预措施是为满足农村人口的需求而设计的。我们开展了一项试点随机对照试验,重点研究了针对 75 名居住在农村、有饮酒风险的成年人的移动行为经济干预措施的可接受性和可行性。我们从一个大型医疗系统招募了参与者,并将他们随机分配到四种反映行为经济学方法的虚拟交付条件中的一种:偶发未来思维(EFT)、自愿选择(VC)、EFT 和 VC 或增强型常规护理对照(EUC)。干预措施包括电话诱导课程,然后是为期两周的条件一致的生态瞬间干预(EMI;2 次/天)和生态瞬间评估(EMA;1 次/天)。参与者分别在基线、干预后和两个月的随访中完成评估,并提供干预反馈。各种情况下的 EMA 平均完成率为 92.9%。在积极干预条件下,89.3%的参与者表示诱导课程很有帮助,80.0%的参与者表示诱导课程影响了他们未来的饮酒。我们还报告了初步的饮酒结果。讨论本文评估的行为经济干预内容和试验程序似乎是可行和可接受的。下一步工作包括确定其在减少酒精使用和公共健康危害方面的有效性。
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来源期刊
Drug and alcohol dependence reports
Drug and alcohol dependence reports Psychiatry and Mental Health
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