» Articles » PMID: 34432263

Brief Online Negative Affect Focused Functional Imagery Training Improves 2-Week Drinking Outcomes in Hazardous Student Drinkers: a Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial

Overview
Journal Int J Behav Med
Publisher Informa Healthcare
Date 2021 Aug 25
PMID 34432263
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Negative affect plays an important role in motivating problematic alcohol use. Consequently, training imagery-based adaptive responses to negative affect could reduce problematic alcohol use. The current study tested whether personalised online functional imagery training (FIT) to utilise positive mental imagery in response to negative affect would improve drinking outcomes in hazardous negative affect drinking students.

Method: Participants were 52 hazardous student drinkers who drink to cope with negative affect. Participants in the active group (n = 24) were trained online over 2 weeks to respond to personalised negative drinking triggers by retrieving a personalised adaptive strategy they might use to mitigate negative affect, whereas participants in the control group (n = 28) received standard risk information about binge drinking at university. Measures of daily drinking quantity, drinking motives, self-efficacy and use of protective behavioural strategies were obtained at baseline and 2 weeks follow-up.

Results: There were three significant interactions between group and time in a per-protocol analysis: the active intervention group showed increased self-efficacy of control over negative affect drinking and control over alcohol consumption and decreased social drinking motives from baseline to 2-week follow-up, relative to the control intervention group. There were no effects on drinking frequency.

Conclusion: These findings provide initial evidence that online training to respond to negative affect drinking triggers by retrieving mental imagery of adaptive strategies can improve drinking-related outcomes in hazardous, student, negative affect drinkers. The findings support the utility of FIT interventions for substance use.

Citing Articles

Health behaviour interventions to improve mental health outcomes for students in the university setting: a systematic review of randomised controlled trials.

Streram S, Burrows T, Duncan M, Hutchesson M Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2025; 22(1):32.

PMID: 40069770 PMC: 11900387. DOI: 10.1186/s12966-025-01718-7.


A sex- and gender-based analysis of alcohol treatment intervention research involving youth: A methodological systematic review.

Lowik A, Mniszak C, Pang M, Ziafat K, Karamouzian M, Knight R PLoS Med. 2024; 21(6):e1004413.

PMID: 38829916 PMC: 11182506. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1004413.


Brief online negative affect focused functional imagery training (FIT) improves four-week drinking outcomes in hazardous student drinkers: A pilot randomised controlled trial replication in South Africa.

Shuai R, Ahmed-Leitao F, Bloom J, Seedat S, Hogarth L Addict Behav Rep. 2024; 19:100540.

PMID: 38586438 PMC: 10995806. DOI: 10.1016/j.abrep.2024.100540.


Drinking to Cope is Uniquely Associated with Less Specific and Bleaker Future Goal Generation in Young Hazardous Drinkers.

Shuai R, Magner-Parsons B, Hogarth L J Psychopathol Behav Assess. 2023; 45(2):403-414.

PMID: 37215642 PMC: 10198914. DOI: 10.1007/s10862-023-10032-0.


Brief Negative Affect Focused Functional Imagery Training Abolishes Stress-Induced Alcohol Choice in Hazardous Student Drinkers.

Bakou A, Shuai R, Hogarth L J Addict. 2021; 2021:5801781.

PMID: 34580617 PMC: 8464424. DOI: 10.1155/2021/5801781.

References
1.
Renner F, Schwarz P, Peters M, Huibers M . Effects of a best-possible-self mental imagery exercise on mood and dysfunctional attitudes. Psychiatry Res. 2013; 215(1):105-10. DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2013.10.033. View

2.
Schubert T, Eloo R, Scharfen J, Morina N . How imagining personal future scenarios influences affect: Systematic review and meta-analysis. Clin Psychol Rev. 2019; 75:101811. DOI: 10.1016/j.cpr.2019.101811. View

3.
Dyer M, Board A, Hogarth L, Suddell S, Heron J, Hickman M . State anxiety and alcohol choice: Evidence from experimental and online observational studies. J Psychopharmacol. 2020; 34(11):1237-1249. PMC: 7604879. DOI: 10.1177/0269881120940913. View

4.
Sze Y, Daniel T, Kilanowski C, Collins R, Epstein L . Web-Based and Mobile Delivery of an Episodic Future Thinking Intervention for Overweight and Obese Families: A Feasibility Study. JMIR Mhealth Uhealth. 2015; 3(4):e97. PMC: 4704914. DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.4603. View

5.
Spillane N, Schick M, Kirk-Provencher K, Hill D, Wyatt J, Jackson K . Structured and Unstructured Activities and Alcohol and Marijuana Use in Middle School: The Role of Availability and Engagement. Subst Use Misuse. 2020; 55(11):1765-1773. PMC: 8409240. DOI: 10.1080/10826084.2020.1762652. View