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DOI: 10.1037/a0034087
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

RCT of web-based personalized normative feedback for college drinking prevention: Are typical student norms good enough?

Joseph W. LaBrie,Melissa A. Lewis,David C. Atkins,Clayton Neighbors,Cheng Zheng,Shannon R. Kenney,Lucy E. Napper,Theresa Walter,Jason R. Kilmer,Justin F. Hummer,Joel R. Grossbard,Tehniat M. Ghaidarov,Sruti Desai,Christine M. Lee,Mary E. Larimer

Psychology
Normative
Psychological intervention
2013
Personalized normative feedback (PNF) interventions are generally effective at correcting normative misperceptions and reducing risky alcohol consumption among college students. However, research has yet to establish what level of reference group specificity is most efficacious in delivering PNF. This study compared the efficacy of a web-based PNF intervention using 8 increasingly specific reference groups against a Web-BASICS intervention and a repeated-assessment control in reducing risky drinking and associated consequences.Participants were 1,663 heavy-drinking Caucasian and Asian undergraduates at 2 universities. The referent for web-based PNF was either the typical same-campus student or a same-campus student at 1 (either gender, race, or Greek affiliation), or a combination of 2 (e.g., gender and race), or all 3 levels of specificity (i.e., gender, race, and Greek affiliation). Hypotheses were tested using quasi-Poisson generalized linear models fit by generalized estimating equations.The PNF intervention participants showed modest reductions in all 4 outcomes (average total drinks, peak drinking, drinking days, and drinking consequences) compared with control participants. No significant differences in drinking outcomes were found between the PNF group as a whole and the Web-BASICS group. Among the 8 PNF conditions, participants receiving typical student PNF demonstrated greater reductions in all 4 outcomes compared with those receiving PNF for more specific reference groups. Perceived drinking norms and discrepancies between individual behavior and actual norms mediated the efficacy of the intervention.Findings suggest a web-based PNF intervention using the typical student referent offers a parsimonious approach to reducing problematic alcohol use outcomes among college students.
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    RCT of web-based personalized normative feedback for college drinking prevention: Are typical student norms good enough?” is a paper by Joseph W. LaBrie Melissa A. Lewis David C. Atkins Clayton Neighbors Cheng Zheng Shannon R. Kenney Lucy E. Napper Theresa Walter Jason R. Kilmer Justin F. Hummer Joel R. Grossbard Tehniat M. Ghaidarov Sruti Desai Christine M. Lee Mary E. Larimer published in 2013. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.