Home > The role of sex and age in moderating the outcome of in-person and computer-based brief alcohol interventions at general hospitals: reanalysis of a brief intervention study.

Baumann, Sophie and Gaertner, Beate and Bischof, Gallus and Krolo, Filipa and John, Ulrich and Freyer-Adam, Jennis (2022) The role of sex and age in moderating the outcome of in-person and computer-based brief alcohol interventions at general hospitals: reanalysis of a brief intervention study. European Addiction Research, 28, (6), pp. 455-461. https://doi.org/10.1159/000526339.

External website: https://www.karger.com/ear/article/28/6/455/828218...

INTRODUCTION The aim of this study was to test whether brief alcohol interventions at general hospitals work equally well for males and females and across age-groups.

METHODS The current study includes a reanalysis of data reported in the PECO study (testing delivery channels of individualized motivationally tailored alcohol interventions among general hospital patients: in PErson vs. COmputer-based) and is therefore of exploratory nature. At-risk drinking general hospital patients aged 18-64 years (N = 961) were randomized to in-person counseling, computer-generated individualized feedback letters, or assessment only. Both interventions were delivered on the ward and 1 and 3 months later. Follow-ups were conducted at months 6, 12, 18, and 24. The outcome was grams of alcohol/day. Study group × sex and study group × age interactions were tested as predictors of change in grams of alcohol/day over 24 months in latent growth models. If rescaled likelihood ratio tests indicated improved model fit due to the inclusion of interactions, moderator level-specific net changes were calculated.

RESULTS Model fit was not significantly improved due to the inclusion of interaction terms between study group and sex (χ2[6] = 5.9, p = 0.439) or age (χ2[6] = 5.5, p = 0.485).

DISCUSSION Both in-person counseling and computer-generated feedback letters may work equally well among males and females as well as among different age-groups. Therefore, widespread delivery of brief alcohol interventions at general hospitals may be unlikely to widen sex and age inequalities in alcohol-related harm.


Item Type
Article
Publication Type
International, Open Access, Article
Drug Type
Alcohol
Intervention Type
Treatment method, Prevention, Harm reduction
Date
2022
Identification #
https://doi.org/10.1159/000526339
Page Range
pp. 455-461
Publisher
Karger
Volume
28
Number
6
EndNote

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