AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on addressing heavy alcohol consumption among adolescents aged 15 to 20 with low educational backgrounds in the Netherlands, as current prevention programs are lacking.
  • A web-based intervention, "What Do You Drink" (WDYD), will be tested on 750 participants through a randomized controlled trial, comparing its effectiveness against a control group with no intervention.
  • The primary outcomes will measure changes in drinking within safe limits, weekly consumption, and binge drinking frequency, alongside secondary outcomes related to alcohol-related attitudes and self-efficacy over specified time points.

Article Abstract

Background: The serious negative health consequences of heavy drinking among adolescents is cause for concern, especially among adolescents aged 15 to 20 years with a low educational background. In the Netherlands, there is a lack of alcohol prevention programs directed to the drinking patterns of this specific target group. The study described in this protocol will test the effectiveness of a web-based brief alcohol intervention that aims to reduce alcohol use among heavy drinking adolescents aged 15 to 20 years with a low educational background.

Methods/design: The effectiveness of the What Do You Drink (WDYD) web-based brief alcohol intervention will be tested among 750 low-educated, heavy drinking adolescents. It will use a two-arm parallel group cluster randomized controlled trial. Classes of adolescents from educational institutions will be randomly assigned to either the experimental (n = 375: web-based brief alcohol intervention) or control condition (n = 375: no intervention). Primary outcomes measures will be: 1) the percentage of participants who drink within the normative limits of the Dutch National Health Council for low-risk drinking, 2) reductions in mean weekly alcohol consumption, and 3) frequency of binge drinking. The secondary outcome measures include the alcohol-related cognitions, attitudes, self-efficacy, and subjective norms, which will be measured at baseline and at one and six months after the intervention.

Discussion: This study protocol presents the study design of a two-arm parallel-group randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effectiveness of the WDYD web-based brief alcohol intervention. We hypothesized a reduction in mean weekly alcohol consumption and in the frequency of binge drinking in the experimental condition, resulting from the web-based brief alcohol intervention, compared to the control condition.

Trial Registration: Netherlands Trial Register NTR2971.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3404935PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-13-83DOI Listing

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