. Drinking alcohol has detrimental health consequences, and effective interventions to reduce hazardous drinking are needed. The self-regulation intervention of Mental Contrasting with Implementation Intentions (MCII) promotes behavior change across a variety of health behaviors. In this study, we tested if online delivery of MCII reduced hazardous drinking in people who were worried about their drinking. . Participants ( = 200, female = 107) were recruited online. They were randomized to learn MCII or solve simple math problems (control). . Immediately after the intervention, participants in the MCII condition (vs. control) reported an increased commitment to reduce drinking. After 1 month, they reported having taken action measured by the Readiness to Change drinking scale. When drinking was hazardous (Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test ≥ 8, = 85), participants in the MCII condition indicated a decreased number of drinking days, exp(β) = 0.47, CI (confidence interval) [-1.322, -.207], = .02, and drinks per week, exp(β) = 0.57, CI [0.94, 5.514], = .007, compared with the control condition. . These findings demonstrate that a brief, self-guided online intervention ( = 28 minutes) can reduce drinking in people who worry about their drinking. Our findings show a higher impact in people at risk for hazardous drinking. . MCII is scalable as an online intervention. Future studies should test the cost-effectiveness of the intervention in real-world settings.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1090198119826284DOI Listing

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