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Integrating Social Media Inspired Features into a Personalized Normative Feedback Intervention Combats Social Media-based Alcohol Influence

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2021 Sep 9
PMID 34500245
Citations 6
Authors
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Abstract

Backround: Research suggests that the social media platforms popular on college campuses may reflect, reinforce, and even exacerbate heavy drinking practices among students. The present study was designed to directly examine: (1) whether exposure to alcohol-related content on social media diminishes the efficacy of a traditional web-based personalized normative feedback (PNF) alcohol intervention among first-year drinkers; and (2) if social media inspired features and digital game mechanics can be integrated into a PNF intervention to combat social media-based alcohol influence and increase efficacy.

Method: Alcohol experienced first-year college students (N = 223) completed a pre-survey that assessed exposure to alcohol-related content and social media and were randomized to 1 of 3 web-based alcohol PNF conditions (traditional, gamified only, or social media inspired gamified). One month later, participants' alcohol consumption was reassessed.

Results: Among participants who received traditional PNF, social media-based alcohol exposure interacted with pre-intervention drinking such that traditional PNF was less effective in reducing drinking among heavier drinkers reporting greater exposure to alcohol-related social media content. Further, when regression models compared the efficacy of all three conditions, the social media inspired gamified PNF condition was significantly more effective in reducing drinking than was traditional PNF among moderate and heavy drinkers reporting greater exposure to alcohol on social media.

Conclusion: Although additional research is needed, these findings suggest that representing the population of students on whom normative statistics are based with social media-like user avatars and profiles may enhance the degree to which alcohol PNF is relatable and believable among high-risk students.

Citing Articles

Dealing with Alcohol-Related Posts on Social Media: Using a Mixed-Method Approach to Understand Young Peoples' Problem Awareness and Evaluations of Intervention Ideas.

Hendriks H, Thanh Le T, Gebhardt W, van den Putte B, Vanherle R Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023; 20(10).

PMID: 37239547 PMC: 10218174. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph20105820.


Injunctive and descriptive normative feedback for college drinking prevention: Is the whole greater than the sum of its parts?.

Larimer M, Graupensperger S, Lewis M, Cronce J, Kilmer J, Atkins D Psychol Addict Behav. 2022; 37(3):447-461.

PMID: 36480396 PMC: 11162751. DOI: 10.1037/adb0000893.


Capturing the bigger picture: A gestalt of general and alcohol-specific social media usage during the transition to college as a predictor of first-year alcohol use and consequences.

Trager B, Morgan R, Boyle S, Montiel Ishino F, LaBrie J Addict Behav. 2022; 136:107472.

PMID: 36067637 PMC: 9708092. DOI: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2022.107472.


Serious Games Supporting the Prevention and Treatment of Alcohol and Drug Consumption in Youth: Scoping Review.

Martinez-Miranda J, Espinosa-Curiel I JMIR Serious Games. 2022; 10(3):e39086.

PMID: 36006694 PMC: 9459843. DOI: 10.2196/39086.


Using social network methodology to examine the effects of exposure to alcohol-related social media content on alcohol use: A critical review.

Strowger M, Braitman A Exp Clin Psychopharmacol. 2022; 31(1):280-293.

PMID: 35357872 PMC: 10107381. DOI: 10.1037/pha0000561.


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