Randomized controlled trial of the effects of completing the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test questionnaire on self‐reported hazardous drinking
- 11 January 2008
- Vol. 103 (2) , 241-248
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1360-0443.2007.02080.x
Abstract
The direct effects of screening on drinking behaviour have not previously been evaluated experimentally. We tested whether screening reduces self-reported hazardous drinking in comparison with a non-screened control group. Two-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT), with both groups blinded to the true nature of the study. A total of 421 university students aged 18-24 years, recruited in five London student unions. Both groups completed a brief pen-and-paper general health and socio-demographic questionnaire, which for the experimental group also included the 10-item Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) screening questionnaire. The primary outcome was the between-group difference in AUDIT score at 2-3-month follow-up. Eight secondary outcomes comprised other aspects of hazardous drinking, including dedicated measures of alcohol consumption, problems and dependence. A statistically significant effect size of 0.23 (0.01-0.45) was detected on the designated primary outcome. The marginal nature of the statistical significance of this effect was apparent in additional analyses with covariates. Statistically significant differences were also obtained in three of eight secondary outcomes, and the observed effect sizes were not dissimilar to the known effects of brief interventions. It is unclear to what extent these findings represent the effects of screening alone, a Hawthorne effect in which drinking behaviour has changed in response to monitoring, or whether they indicate reporting bias. These possibilities have important implications both for the dissemination of screening as an intervention in its own right and for behavioural intervention trials methodology.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Randomized trial of a brief depression prevention program: An elusive search for a psychosocial placebo control conditionBehaviour Research and Therapy, 2007
- Assessment may conceal therapeutic benefit: findings from a randomized controlled trial for hazardous drinkingAddiction, 2006
- Brief motivational interventions for heavy college drinkers: A randomized controlled trial.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2006
- Feedback interventions for college alcohol misuse: What, why and for whom?Addictive Behaviors, 2005
- Deterioration over time in effect of Motivational Interviewing in reducing drug consumption and related risk among young peopleAddiction, 2005
- Development of the Leeds Dependence Questionnaire (LDQ): a questionnaire to measure alcohol and opiate dependence in the context of a treatment evaluation packageAddiction, 1994
- Bogus-Pipeline Effects on Self-Reported College Student Drug Use, Problems, and AttitudesInternational Journal of the Addictions, 1989
- Randomised controlled trial of general practitioner intervention in patients with excessive alcohol consumption.BMJ, 1988
- The Hawthorne effect: A reconsideration of the methodological artifact.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1984
- What Happened at Hawthorne?Science, 1974