Evidence Rating for Outcomes
Drugs & Substance Abuse | Alcohol |
Drugs & Substance Abuse | Positive alcohol expectancies |
Date:
This practice consists of interventions designed to reduce alcohol consumption in college students. Interventions can be delivered face to face or virtually and target different drinking-related behaviors, such as heavy drinking and alcohol expectancies. The practice is rated Promising for reducing alcohol consumption and reducing positive alcohol expectancies of college students.
Practice Goals/Target Population
Excessive alcohol consumption is a pervasive issue that is associated with injuries from automobile crashes, drunk driving arrests, assaults, sexual abuse, health problems, and substance abuse disorders (Samson and Tanner-Smith 2015). Excessive drinking has been demonstrated to be a particularly prevalent problem among college students. Approximately 64 percent of full-time college students reported drinking in the previous month, compared with 53 percent of their non-college student peers (Scott-Sheldon et al. 2012). Alcohol interventions targeting college students vary in their approach, target audience, and content. However, the overall goal of alcohol interventions is to reduce alcohol consumption and risky drinking behavior (such as binge drinking) among college students.
Services Provided
Alcohol interventions for college students can be implemented using a variety of approaches, including face-to-face interventions (FTFIs) or computer-delivered interventions (CDIs). FTFIs allow the counselor or provider to customize the intervention to the individual student, which creates the opportunity for an interactive discussion with questions specific to a student’s needs. One example of an FTFI is brief motivational interviewing, where students attend individual 60-minute sessions to discuss drinking behaviors and are provided with a feedback sheet at the end that details personalized goals and tips for safer drinking (Carey et al. 2011). However, FTFIs require individual counselor attention, which can be expensive for college campuses to implement.
CDIs are a common alternative to FTFIs because of the ease of implementation and potential for widespread reach. CDIs seek to provide the same knowledge set as FTFIs, but through interaction with a computer rather than a counselor. Students are able to set their own pace, but they may be required by their college or university to spend a certain amount of time on the platform (Carey et al. 2011). CDIs may also require students to read chapters covering specific topics (such as the effect of alcohol on the body) and then complete a quiz. Although CDIs are simple to implement, they also have limitations in that they can be completed with minimal effort or in distracting environments that prevent students from reflecting properly on their own personal choices with regard to drinking.
Alcohol interventions designed to prevent or reduce alcohol use usually target first-year college students because the transition from high school to college is often associated with a rapid behavioral change along with an increased exploration of identity (Scott-Sheldon et al. 2012). During the first few weeks of college, students create perceptions of norms regarding alcohol consumption. This is why the management of alcohol expectancies, or positive or negative beliefs associated with alcohol use, is one targeted area that alcohol interventions may focus on. Research has found that positive expectancies (such as the belief that social interactions will be easier if you drink alcohol) are associated with greater alcohol consumption, whereas negative expectancies (such as the negative health problems that result from excessive drinking) are associated with lower alcohol consumption (Scott-Sheldon et al. 2012; Grazioli et al. 2015). A type of program that challenges alcohol expectancies is the expectancy challenge (EC) intervention, which varies in terms of content, delivery, and dosage. Typically, EC interventions are designed to illustrate alcohol expectancies in a group, in a bar-like setting. Often, a group of participants will be given either an alcoholic or placebo beverage and are encouraged to interact with each other. In lieu of providing alcohol to participants, a placebo with a minimal dose of alcohol on the rim of the glass may also be given. Afterwards, participants are asked to determine who in the group was drinking alcohol and who was not. The incorrect identification in this session allows the participants to consider the actual effects of alcohol, compared with their expectancies.
Finally, alcohol interventions for college students can be delivered across multiple sessions or as brief, single-session interventions. The benefits of single-session interventions are cost-efficiency and convenience. Because of their brevity, these single-session interventions can be delivered conveniently in a variety of settings; however, the amount of information that can be provided during these sessions is limited.
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Drugs & Substance Abuse | Alcohol
Overall, the results from the meta-analyses indicated that face-to-face interventions (FTFIs) and computer-delivered interventions (CDIs) for college drinkers did not have statistically significant impacts on alcohol consumption. However, students who participated in brief single-session alcohol interventions, alcohol expectancy challenge (EC) interventions, and alcohol interventions targeting first-year college students showed statistically significant reductions in alcohol consumption, compared with students who did not participate. Across 11 studies, Carey and colleagues (2012) found no statistically significant differences in the quantity of alcohol consumed (per week or month) between students in the treatment group who participated in FTFIs for college drinkers, compared with students in the control group (who did not participate), at the long-term follow up. Similarly, across 5 studies, Carey and colleagues (2012) also found no statistically significant differences in the quantity of alcohol consumed (per week or month) between students in the treatment group who participated in CDIs for college drinkers, compared with students in the control group, at the long-term follow up. Conversely, Samson and Tanner-Smith (2015), examining the results from 73 studies, found an overall statistically significant weighted mean effect size of 0.18, indicating that heavy-drinking college students who participated in single-session brief alcohol interventions consumed less alcohol, compared with control group students. Scott-Sheldon and colleagues (2012) examined the results from 11 studies of alcohol expectancy challenge (EC) interventions and found a statistically significant effect size of 0.24. This indicates that college students who participated in EC interventions reduced the quantity of their alcohol consumption, compared with control group students. Finally, looking at the results from 42 studies of alcohol interventions targeting first-year college students, Scott-Sheldon and colleagues (2014) found a statistically significant effect size of 0.13. This indicates that first-year college students who participated in alcohol interventions reduced their quantity of alcohol consumption, compared with control group students. |
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Drugs & Substance Abuse | Positive alcohol expectancies
Across 11 studies of alcohol EC interventions, Scott-Sheldon and colleagues (2012) found a statistically significant effect size of 0.28 for positive alcohol expectancies. These results indicate that college students who participated in EC interventions reported lower positive alcohol expectancies (meaning they did not have positive expectations associated with consuming alcohol), compared with college students in the control group. |
Literature Coverage Dates | Number of Studies | Number of Study Participants | |
---|---|---|---|
Meta Analysis 1 | 1998-2011 | 48 | 37480 |
Meta Analysis 2 | 1995-2012 | 73 | 0 |
Meta Analysis 3 | 1986-2008 | 14 | 1415 |
Meta Analysis 4 | - | 41 | 24294 |
Carey and colleagues (2012) conducted a meta-analysis to examine the efficacy of computer-delivered interventions (CDIs) and face-to-face interventions (FTFIs) on alcohol use for college students. A comprehensive search was conducted through multiple electronic databases, including PsycINFO, PubMed, Dissertation Abstracts, ERIC, CINAHL, and The Cochrane Library. Studies were determined eligible for inclusion if they 1) examined the efficacy of alcohol interventions at an individual level, 2) sampled college students, 3) conducted either a randomized controlled trial (RCT) or quasi-experimental design (QED) with a wait-list or no-treatment control condition, 4) measured alcohol behavior, and 5) provided adequate information necessary to determine an effect size. Studies were excluded if they 1) did not focus on alcohol use only (i.e., combined substance use interventions), 2) sampled non-college students, 3) used an active control condition, or 4) included a structural-level intervention component.
A total of 48 studies (47 RCTs and 1 QED) were identified, which included 37,480 participants. Of the 48 studies, 22 examined FTFIs, and 26 examined CDIs. The average age of participants in the FTFI studies was 19 years, and 56 percent were women. The final sample size included 5,237 students whose race/ethnicity was White (83 percent), Hispanic (11 percent), Black (7 percent), and Asian (5 percent). Of the participants in the FTFI studies, 68 percent were freshmen, 13 percent were sophomores, 10 percent were juniors, and 5 percent were seniors. Nearly all participants in the FTFI studies (97 percent) reported alcohol use prior to the intervention. The average age of participants in the CDI studies was 20 years, and 51 percent were women. The final sample size for these studies comprised 32,243 students who were 81 percent White, 13 percent Hispanic, 10 percent Asian, and 7 percent Black. Of these students, 73 percent were freshmen, 16 percent were sophomores, 12 percent were juniors, and 10 percent were seniors. Most participants (95 percent) had also reported alcohol use prior to the intervention.
Outcomes of interest included alcohol consumption (i.e., a certain quantity consumed over a particular period such as a week or a month, frequency of heavy drinking, or peak blood alcohol concentration) and alcohol-related problems (which were operationalized using multi-item scales). The outcomes were examined at the short-term follow up (less than 13 weeks postintervention), intermediate follow up (14–26 weeks postintervention), and long-term follow up (more than 27 weeks postintervention). The CrimeSolutions review of this meta-analysis focused on the outcomes at the long-term follow up. Effect sizes were calculated using Cohen’s d. If a study reported dichotomous outcomes, an odds ratio was calculated and transformed to d using the Cox transformation. The weighted mean effect sizes were calculated using random-effects procedures.
Meta Analysis 2Samson and Tanner-Smith (2015) conducted a meta-analysis to determine the efficacy of single-session interventions to reduce alcohol use among college students. This meta-analysis consisted of a subset of studies from a larger meta-analysis (Tanner-Smith and Lipsey 2015), which synthesized results from studies examining brief alcohol interventions for all adolescents and young adults. A comprehensive search strategy was used to identify published and non-published studies. First, electronic databases (such as Clinical Trials Register, Dissertation Abstracts, ERIC, PsycINFO, PubMed, and Social Services Abstracts) were searched from 1980 through December 31, 2012. Other sources were then searched to identify grey literature.
Studies were considered eligible for inclusion in the larger meta-analysis if they had 1) a comparison condition of no treatment, a wait-list control, or some form of treatment as usual; 2) participant samples that included adolescents and young adults (defined as individuals ages 11–25) or samples that consisted entirely of undergraduate college students; 3) a study design of a randomized controlled trial (RCT) or controlled quasi-experimental design; 4) provided enough information to determine an effect size, and 5) assessed an intervention effect on at least one outcome variable that measured alcohol use or alcohol-related problems (Tanner-Smith and Lipsey 2015). Samson and Tanner-Smith (2015) then identified studies from this sample that used experimental or controlled quasi-experimental designs to test the effects of a single-session brief alcohol intervention for undergraduate students ages 25 years or younger. Studies were considered eligible if the intervention was delivered in a single session and if the study participants exhibited hazardous levels of alcohol use (defined as a group average or as a majority of participants drinking more than two drinks per day or four drinks in a sitting in the past month).
A total of 73 studies were identified as eligible for inclusion. The majority of studies (79 percent) were conducted in the United States. Studies were also conducted in Australia/New Zealand (7 percent), Great Britain (5 percent), and Scandinavia (3 percent). Approximately one third (37 percent) of comparison groups were active conditions rather than no- treatment or wait-list control groups. With regard to the intervention type, 48 percent used motivational enhancement therapy/motivational interviewing, 41 percent used feedback only, 8 percent used cognitive–behavioral therapy, and 3 percent used psychoeducational therapy. In regard to gender and race, participants were 51 percent female) and 78 percent White.
The outcome of interest was alcohol consumption among heavy-drinking college students (measured as frequency of use, quantity of use, peak consumption, and blood alcohol concentration). Effect sizes were calculated using a standardized mean difference effect size (Cohen’s d).
Meta Analysis 3Scott-Sheldon and colleagues (2012) conducted a meta-analysis to determine the efficacy of alcohol expectancy challenge (EC) interventions for alcohol abuse prevention in college students. A comprehensive search strategy was used to obtain relevant studies from electronic databases (such as PsycINFO, PubMed, Dissertation Abstracts, ERIC, CINAHL, and The Cochrane Library), reference sections of relevant manuscripts, professional journals, databases of alcohol-related interventions for college students from the College Drinking Meta-Analytic Team at Brown University, and responses to listserv requests. Studies were determined eligible for inclusion if the authors 1) examined a behavioral intervention to reduce alcohol expectancies, 2) sampled college students, 3) used a randomized controlled trial (RCT) or quasi-experimental design (QED) with a control condition or a within-group design with pre- and posttest outcomes, 4) assessed alcohol expectancies, and 5) provided information necessary for calculating effect sizes. Studies were excluded if the authors 1) did not focus solely on alcohol use (i.e., combined substance use interventions), 2) sampled non-college students, 3) did not assess alcohol expectancies, or 4) included a structural-level intervention component.
A total of 14 studies (that examined 19 interventions) were identified. The studies included 1,417 participants. Most studies were conducted at large public universities in the United States (71 percent). Of these, 36 percent were in the Southeast, 14 percent were in the Midwest, 7 percent were in the Northeast, 7 percent were in the Southwest, and 7 percent were in multiple regions. Studies were also conducted in the Netherlands (14 percent) and Sweden (7 percent). Most studies were published in journals (86 percent) between 1986 and 2008. The remaining 14 percent were unpublished dissertations. Most participants were White (88 percent) and male (60 percent). The mean age of participants was 20 years, and 49 percent were first-year college students. Nearly all participants (91 percent) reported using alcohol in the past, and none reported a history of or current alcohol treatment.
The outcomes of interest were alcohol-related expectancies and consumption. Alcohol expectancies were measured with a variety of validated measures such as the Alcohol Expectancy Questionnaire. Alcohol consumption was also measured in a variety of ways (e.g., quantity consumed over a period such as a week or a month, or frequency of heavy drinking). Effect sizes were calculated using Cohen’s d. If a study reported dichotomous outcomes, an odds ratio was calculated and transformed to d using the Cox transformation. The weighted mean effect sizes were calculated using random-effects procedures.
Meta Analysis 4Using meta-analytic techniques, Scott-Sheldon and colleagues (2014) analyzed the efficacy of alcohol interventions to prevent alcohol misuse in first-year college students. To identify eligible studies, several electronic databases (including PubMed, PsycINFO, ERIC, Dissertation Abstracts, and The Cochrane Library) were searched. References of relevant papers, abstracts from professional journals, and author responses to requests were also used to retrieve studies. Studies that fulfilled the selection criteria and were available by April 2013 were included in the meta-analysis. To be included, studies had to 1) examine an individual- or group- level intervention intended to reduce or prevent alcohol use, 2) sample first-year college students, 3) use a randomized controlled trial (RCT) with a comparison group, 4) measure alcohol use, and 5) provide sufficient information to calculate an effect size. Studies were excluded if they 1) did not focus solely on alcohol use (i.e., combined substance use interventions), 2) sampled other college students (i.e., upperclassmen), or 3) included a structural-level intervention component.
A total of 41 studies (examining 62 interventions) were identified. The sample consisted of 24,294 participants, most of whom had reported previous alcohol use (85 percent). Of the 62 interventions, 37 percent were FTFIs, 32 percent were CDIs, 12 percent were computer-facilitated FTFIs, 10 percent were delivered through mail or email, 8 percent were a combination of FTFIs and CDIs and mail-based, and 3 percent were written. Of the studies, 31 took place at public universities, 8 took place at private universities, and 1 took place at both public and private universities. Participants were 77 percent White, 9 percent Black, 8 percent Asian, and 6 percent Hispanic. The average age was 19 years, and 57 percent were women.
The outcomes of interest were alcohol consumption and alcohol-related problems. Alcohol consumption was measured in a variety of ways (e.g., quantity consumed over a period such as a week or a month, or frequency of heavy drinking). Alcohol-related problems were operationalized using multi-item scales. Effect sizes were calculated using Cohen’s d.
These sources were used in the development of the practice profile:
Carey, Kate B., Lori A. J. Scott-Sheldon, Jennifer C. Elliott, Lorra Garey, and Michael P. Carey. 2012. “Face-to-Face Versus Computer-Delivered Alcohol Interventions for College Drinkers: A Meta-Analytic Review, 1998 to 2010.” Clinical Psychology Review 32(8):690–703.
Samson, Jennifer E., and Emily E. Tanner-Smith. 2015. “Single-Session Alcohol Interventions for Heavy Drinking College Students: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.” Journal of Studies on Drugs and Alcohol 76:530–43.
Scott-Sheldon, Lori A.J., Danielle L. Terry, Kate B. Carey, Lorra Garey, and Michael P. Carey. 2012. “Efficacy of Expectancy Challenge Interventions to Reduce College Student Drinking: A Meta-Analytic Review.” Psychology of Addictive Behaviors 26(3):393–405.
Scott-Sheldon, Lori A.J., Kate B. Carey, Jennifer C. Elliott, Lorra Garey, and Michael P. Carey. 2014. “Efficacy of Alcohol Interventions for First-Year College Students: A Meta-Analytic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials.” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 82(2):177–88.
These sources were used in the development of the practice profile:
Carey, Kate B., Michael P. Carey, James M. Henson, Stephen A. Maisto, and Kelly S. DeMartini. 2011. “Brief Alcohol Interventions for Mandated College Students: Comparison of Face-to-Face Counseling and Computer-Delivered Interventions.” Addiction 106(3):528-37.
Grazioli, Veronique S., Melissa A. Lewis, Lisa A. Garberson, Nicole Fossos-Wong, Christine M. Lee, and Mary E. Larimer. 2015. “Alcohol Expectancies and Alcohol Outcomes: Effects of the Use of Protective Behavioral Strategies.” Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs 76(3):452–58.
Tanner-Smith, Emily E., and Mark W. Lipsey. 2015. “Brief Alcohol Interventions for Adolescents and Young Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.” Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment 51:1–18.
Following are CrimeSolutions-rated programs that are related to this practice:
Age: 18 - 25
Gender: Male, Female
Race/Ethnicity: White, Black, Hispanic, Asian/Pacific Islander, Other
Setting (Delivery): Campus
Practice Type: Alcohol and Drug Therapy/Treatment, Alcohol and Drug Prevention, Classroom Curricula
Unit of Analysis: Persons