The Effectiveness of an Internet Intervention Aimed at Reducing Alcohol Consumption in Adults

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The Effectiveness of an Internet Intervention Aimed at Reducing Alcohol Consumption in Adults. / Zill, Jördis M; Christalle, Eva; Meyer, Björn; Härter, Martin; Dirmaier, Jörg.

in: DTSCH ARZTEBL INT, Jahrgang 116, Nr. 8, 22.02.2019, S. 127-133.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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@article{ba0135276054401c973f2461244ffd92,
title = "The Effectiveness of an Internet Intervention Aimed at Reducing Alcohol Consumption in Adults",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: In 2012, approximately 3.38 million people in Germany had an alcoholrelated disorder. Internet interventions can help lower alcohol consumption, albeit with mostly small effect sizes. It is still unclear whether the effectiveness of programs aimed at lowering alcohol consumption can be improved by individually adjusting program content for each participant. We studied the effectiveness of Vorvida, a new cognitive-behavioral internet intervention with individual adjustment of content.METHODS: A randomized controlled trial was conducted on 608 adults with problematic alcohol consumption. The primary outcome was self-reported alcohol con - sumption in the past 30 days (as determined by the Quantity-Frequency-Index, QFI) and in the past 7 days (using the Timeline Follow-Back method, TFB). The secondary outcomes were drinking behavior (binge drinking/drunkenness) and satisfaction with Vorvida. Data were collected at three time points: at baseline (t0) and three and six months later (t1, t2). Trial registration: DRKS00006104.RESULTS: The intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis revealed significant differences between groups at time t1 with respect to alcohol consumption (QFI: d = 0.28; TFB: d = 0.42), binge drinking (d = 0.87), and drunkenness (d = 0.39). Satisfaction with the intervention was high (27.4 [standard deviation, SD: 5.3] out of 32 points). All effects persisted, or were stronger, at time t2. Alcohol consumption, as measured by the QFI, declined over the interval from t0 to t2 in both groups: from 63.69 g/day (SD: 61.4) to 32.67 g/day (SD: 39.78) in the intervention group, and from 61.64 g/day (SD: 58.84) to 43.75 g/day (SD: 43.68) in the control group.CONCLUSION: Vorvida was found to be effective in persons with risky, problematic alcohol consumption. Further studies should determine which elements of the program contribute most to effectiveness in routine clinical practice, and what long-term effects can be achieved.",
author = "Zill, {J{\"o}rdis M} and Eva Christalle and Bj{\"o}rn Meyer and Martin H{\"a}rter and J{\"o}rg Dirmaier",
year = "2019",
month = feb,
day = "22",
doi = "10.3238/arztebl.2019.0127",
language = "English",
volume = "116",
pages = "127--133",
journal = "DTSCH ARZTEBL INT",
issn = "1866-0452",
publisher = "Deutscher Arzte-Verlag",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Effectiveness of an Internet Intervention Aimed at Reducing Alcohol Consumption in Adults

AU - Zill, Jördis M

AU - Christalle, Eva

AU - Meyer, Björn

AU - Härter, Martin

AU - Dirmaier, Jörg

PY - 2019/2/22

Y1 - 2019/2/22

N2 - BACKGROUND: In 2012, approximately 3.38 million people in Germany had an alcoholrelated disorder. Internet interventions can help lower alcohol consumption, albeit with mostly small effect sizes. It is still unclear whether the effectiveness of programs aimed at lowering alcohol consumption can be improved by individually adjusting program content for each participant. We studied the effectiveness of Vorvida, a new cognitive-behavioral internet intervention with individual adjustment of content.METHODS: A randomized controlled trial was conducted on 608 adults with problematic alcohol consumption. The primary outcome was self-reported alcohol con - sumption in the past 30 days (as determined by the Quantity-Frequency-Index, QFI) and in the past 7 days (using the Timeline Follow-Back method, TFB). The secondary outcomes were drinking behavior (binge drinking/drunkenness) and satisfaction with Vorvida. Data were collected at three time points: at baseline (t0) and three and six months later (t1, t2). Trial registration: DRKS00006104.RESULTS: The intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis revealed significant differences between groups at time t1 with respect to alcohol consumption (QFI: d = 0.28; TFB: d = 0.42), binge drinking (d = 0.87), and drunkenness (d = 0.39). Satisfaction with the intervention was high (27.4 [standard deviation, SD: 5.3] out of 32 points). All effects persisted, or were stronger, at time t2. Alcohol consumption, as measured by the QFI, declined over the interval from t0 to t2 in both groups: from 63.69 g/day (SD: 61.4) to 32.67 g/day (SD: 39.78) in the intervention group, and from 61.64 g/day (SD: 58.84) to 43.75 g/day (SD: 43.68) in the control group.CONCLUSION: Vorvida was found to be effective in persons with risky, problematic alcohol consumption. Further studies should determine which elements of the program contribute most to effectiveness in routine clinical practice, and what long-term effects can be achieved.

AB - BACKGROUND: In 2012, approximately 3.38 million people in Germany had an alcoholrelated disorder. Internet interventions can help lower alcohol consumption, albeit with mostly small effect sizes. It is still unclear whether the effectiveness of programs aimed at lowering alcohol consumption can be improved by individually adjusting program content for each participant. We studied the effectiveness of Vorvida, a new cognitive-behavioral internet intervention with individual adjustment of content.METHODS: A randomized controlled trial was conducted on 608 adults with problematic alcohol consumption. The primary outcome was self-reported alcohol con - sumption in the past 30 days (as determined by the Quantity-Frequency-Index, QFI) and in the past 7 days (using the Timeline Follow-Back method, TFB). The secondary outcomes were drinking behavior (binge drinking/drunkenness) and satisfaction with Vorvida. Data were collected at three time points: at baseline (t0) and three and six months later (t1, t2). Trial registration: DRKS00006104.RESULTS: The intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis revealed significant differences between groups at time t1 with respect to alcohol consumption (QFI: d = 0.28; TFB: d = 0.42), binge drinking (d = 0.87), and drunkenness (d = 0.39). Satisfaction with the intervention was high (27.4 [standard deviation, SD: 5.3] out of 32 points). All effects persisted, or were stronger, at time t2. Alcohol consumption, as measured by the QFI, declined over the interval from t0 to t2 in both groups: from 63.69 g/day (SD: 61.4) to 32.67 g/day (SD: 39.78) in the intervention group, and from 61.64 g/day (SD: 58.84) to 43.75 g/day (SD: 43.68) in the control group.CONCLUSION: Vorvida was found to be effective in persons with risky, problematic alcohol consumption. Further studies should determine which elements of the program contribute most to effectiveness in routine clinical practice, and what long-term effects can be achieved.

U2 - 10.3238/arztebl.2019.0127

DO - 10.3238/arztebl.2019.0127

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 30940341

VL - 116

SP - 127

EP - 133

JO - DTSCH ARZTEBL INT

JF - DTSCH ARZTEBL INT

SN - 1866-0452

IS - 8

ER -