‘A circuit breaker’ – Interrupting the alcohol autopilot: A qualitative exploration of participants’ experiences of a personalised mHealth approach bias modification intervention for alcohol use

Q1 Psychology
G.L. Bolt, H. Piercy, A. Barnett, V. Manning
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Objective

There is a need for low-cost, wide-reaching interventions to enhance accessibility of support for people with hazardous alcohol consumption. We assessed participant experiences of using a novel, personalised mHealth intervention offering approach bias modification (ApBM) for alcohol use in a community sample drinking at harmful levels to enable a deeper understanding of the end user and engagement.

Methods

Eighteen semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted with adults in the community drinking at harmful/hazardous levels. A reflexive thematic analysis approach was used and data analysis followed iterative categorisation.

Results

Engagement/Motivation and Clinical Value were overarching themes. The useable, accessible, customisable design described by participants enabled training to be readily integrated into routines, enhancing autonomy and self-efficacy beliefs, and facilitating engagement/motivation. Where autonomy or perceived self-efficacy were threatened by a rigid training schedule or lack of clarity/reminders, engagement was reduced. Training increased awareness of drinking behaviours, and encouraged participants to consider alternate goal-directed behaviours with feedback suggesting training may function as a ‘circuit breaker’, increasing time between alcohol craving and seeking, and enabling reflective processing, at least in the short term.

Conclusions

This novel smartphone intervention for alcohol use may be a useful, accessible, ‘just in time’ adjunctive support tool for non-treatment seekers, meeting an important gap in the field. Findings have implications for the implementation of subsequent digital interventions, suggesting participants may stand to gain more from an intervention which enables autonomy and improves self-efficacy beliefs. Theoretically, findings speak to the role of inferential processing in behaviour change, but further research is needed to clearly elucidate ApBM training mechanisms. Practical recommendations for subsequent app iterations are suggested, along with additional opportunities worthy of consideration for future initiatives.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

“断路器”——中断酒精自动驾驶仪:对参与者个性化移动健康方法对酒精使用的偏见修正干预体验的定性探索
目的有必要采取低成本、影响广泛的干预措施,提高危险酒精消费人群获得支持的可及性。我们评估了参与者使用一种新颖的个性化移动健康干预措施的体验,该干预措施为社区样本中有害水平的酒精使用提供了方法偏差修正(ApBM),以便更深入地了解最终用户和参与度。方法采用半结构化电话访谈法,对社区中有害/危险饮酒水平的成年人进行调查。采用反身性主题分析方法,数据分析遵循迭代分类。结果参与/动机和临床价值是首要主题。参与者描述的可用、可访问、可定制的设计使培训能够很容易地融入日常生活,增强自主性和自我效能信念,并促进参与/激励。当自主性或自我效能感受到严格的训练计划或缺乏清晰/提醒的威胁时,参与度就会降低。训练提高了对饮酒行为的认识,并鼓励参与者考虑其他目标导向的行为,反馈表明训练可能起到“熔断器”的作用,增加了渴望和寻求酒精之间的时间,并使反思过程得以实现,至少在短期内是这样。结论这种新颖的智能手机干预酒精使用可能是一种有用的、可获得的、“及时”的辅助支持工具,为非治疗寻求者提供了一个重要的空白。研究结果对后续数字干预的实施具有启示意义,表明参与者可能会从能够实现自主性和提高自我效能感的干预中获得更多。从理论上讲,研究结果说明了推理处理在行为改变中的作用,但需要进一步的研究来清楚地阐明ApBM训练机制。为后续的应用迭代提出了实用的建议,以及值得未来计划考虑的其他机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Addictive Behaviors Reports
Addictive Behaviors Reports Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
69
审稿时长
71 days
期刊介绍: Addictive Behaviors Reports is an open-access and peer reviewed online-only journal offering an interdisciplinary forum for the publication of research in addictive behaviors. The journal accepts submissions that are scientifically sound on all forms of addictive behavior (alcohol, drugs, gambling, Internet, nicotine and technology) with a primary focus on behavioral and psychosocial research. The emphasis of the journal is primarily empirical. That is, sound experimental design combined with valid, reliable assessment and evaluation procedures are a requisite for acceptance. We are particularly interested in ''non-traditional'', innovative and empirically oriented research such as negative/null data papers, replication studies, case reports on novel treatments, and cross-cultural research. Studies that might encourage new lines of inquiry as well as scholarly commentaries on topical issues, systematic reviews, and mini reviews are also very much encouraged. We also welcome multimedia submissions that incorporate video or audio components to better display methodology or findings.
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