Promoting Maintenance of Behavior Change Following Brief Alcohol Intervention
Project Number5K01AA028530-05
Contact PI/Project LeaderREID, ALLECIA E.
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS AMHERST
Description
Abstract Text
PROJECT SUMMARY
College students are at risk for engaging in heavy alcohol use, affecting academic performance and mental
and physical health. Brief motivational interventions reduce alcohol use and consequences, but intervention
gains decay 3-6 months post-intervention. Mandated college students, who have violated university alcohol
policy, are an important intervention target; they drink more, experience more alcohol-related consequences,
and are less likely to maintain reduced drinking than typical students. To promote student health, brief
motivational interventions need to be improved to promote maintenance of reduced drinking. This K01 outlines
the necessary research and training experiences to prepare the PI to become an independent researcher
focused on developing interventions that promote not only initiation, but also maintenance of reduced drinking
among young adults. Notably, the PI will learn the innovative, engineering-inspired multiphase optimization
strategy (MOST), which uses the factorial experimental design to develop highly efficacious interventions. The
proposed research consists of three stages. First, a systematic review will examine theories of and empirical
research on maintenance of behavior change. This will yield recommendations for mechanisms that are likely
to improve maintenance of reduced alcohol use among young adults. In the subsequent stages, all participants
will be mandated students who receive a brief motivational intervention, providing a context for studying
maintenance-enhancing constructs and intervention strategies. In the second stage, the utility of constructs for
predicting maintenance will be examined in 475 mandated students, followed 1-, 3-, and 6-months post-
intervention. Constructs proposed by two prominent models of maintenance—coping motives, parent-student
communication, maintenance self-efficacy, and recovery self-efficacy—in addition to promising constructs
identified in the systematic review, will be examined as predictors of maintenance trajectories. Third,
intervention strategies targeting identified maintenance enhancement constructs will be developed and pilot
tested for acceptability among 60 mandated students; a mandated-specific parent handbook will be piloted
among 20 of their parents. A pilot optimization trial will also be conducted with 80 mandated students and their
parents. Students will be randomly assigned to one of up to 16 conditions in a factorial experimental design.
Results of the proposed research will yield important information on the factors that promote maintenance of
reduced alcohol use, supporting subsequent grant applications to further develop a maintenance-enhancement
intervention. The PI will work with a highly skilled mentoring team (Drs. Kate Carey, Katie Witkiewitz, Linda
Collins, Rebecca Spencer) to gain expertise in: 1) maintenance of behavior change theories; 2) intervention
development; 3) MOST; 4) management and analysis of longitudinal research; 5) grant writing. The research
and training activities proposed in this K01 will produce both an independent research scientist and important
scientific knowledge on maintenance of health behavior change, an understudied topic.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
Heavy alcohol use remains a serious problem among college students. Brief motivational interventions reduce
college students' alcohol use but effects are not sustained. This research seeks to identify the psychosocial
factors that affect college students' maintenance of intervention gains over time and to conduct the formative
research needed to develop a maintenance-enhancement alcohol intervention for college students.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
Adolescent and Young AdultAffectAlcohol consumptionApplications GrantsBehaviorBody Weight decreasedCategoriesCessation of lifeCommunicationDataEmpirical ResearchEngineeringEnrollmentEvaluationExperimental DesignsGoalsGrantHealthHealth behavior changeHeavy DrinkingIndividualInjuryInterventionInvestmentsKnowledgeLearningLiteratureLongitudinal StudiesMaintenanceMassachusettsMeasuresMental HealthMentorsMentorshipMethodsModelingOutcomeParentsParticipantPerformancePhasePreparationProcessPsychosocial FactorPublic HealthRandomizedRecommendationRecoveryResearchResearch ActivityResearch PersonnelRiskScienceScientistSelf EfficacyServicesSocial supportSpecific qualifier valueStudentsTheory of ChangeTimeTrainingTraining ActivityUnited States National Institutes of HealthUniversitiesWorkWritingalcohol consequencesalcohol interventionalcohol related consequencesbehavior changebrief alcohol interventionbrief interventionbrief motivational interventioncopingcostdrinkingefficacious interventionefficacy evaluationexperiencehandbookimprovedinnovationlongitudinal analysismultiphase optimization strategyphysical conditioningpilot testpost interventionpsychosocialpublic policy on alcoholreduced alcohol userelapse preventionsexual assaultskillssmoking cessationsystematic reviewtheoriestherapy developmentunderage drinkinguniversity studentyoung adult
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
CFDA Code
273
DUNS Number
153926712
UEI
VGJHK59NMPK9
Project Start Date
01-September-2020
Project End Date
31-August-2025
Budget Start Date
01-September-2024
Budget End Date
31-August-2025
Project Funding Information for 2024
Total Funding
$170,969
Direct Costs
$158,305
Indirect Costs
$12,664
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2024
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
$170,969
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5K01AA028530-05
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
No Publications available for 5K01AA028530-05
Patents
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Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
No Outcomes available for 5K01AA028530-05
Clinical Studies
No Clinical Studies information available for 5K01AA028530-05
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History
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Similar Projects
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