Who benefits from brief motivational intervention among young adults presenting to the emergency department with alcohol intoxication: A latent-class moderation analysis.

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Version: Final published version
License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_68D454ACD8DB
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Who benefits from brief motivational intervention among young adults presenting to the emergency department with alcohol intoxication: A latent-class moderation analysis.
Journal
Alcohol, clinical & experimental research
Author(s)
Gaume J., Blanc S., Magill M., McCambridge J., Bertholet N., Hugli O., Daeppen J.B.
ISSN
2993-7175 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2993-7175
Publication state
Published
Issued date
08/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
47
Number
8
Pages
1614-1623
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Research has not identified which patients optimally benefit from brief Motivational Interviewing (bMI) for heavy drinking when delivered to young adults in the Emergency Department (ED).
We conducted secondary analyses of data from a randomized controlled trial in which 344 young adults (18-35 years) presenting to the ED with alcohol intoxication received either bMI or Brief Advice (BA, control group). We used Latent Class Analysis to derive participants' profiles from baseline characteristics (i.e., sex, age, severity of alcohol use disorder, attribution of ED admission to alcohol use, importance, and confidence to change, cognitive discrepancy, anxiety, depression, and trait reactance). We then conducted a moderation analysis to assess the number of heavy drinking days at short-term (1-month) and long-term (12-month) follow-up using negative binomial regressions with interactions between the intervention and derived classes.
Fit statistics indicated that a 4-class solution best fit the data. Class 3 (high severity, importance and discrepancy, and low confidence and anxiety) benefitted more from bMI than BA at short- and long-term follow-up than Class 1 (younger; lowest severity, importance, discrepancy, reactance, anxiety and depression, and highest confidence). Class 2 (older; highest severity, importance, discrepancy, reactance, anxiety and depression, and lowest confidence) also benefitted more from bMI than BA than did Class 1 at short-term follow-up. In these significant contrasts, Class 1 benefitted more from BA than bMI. There were no significant interactions involving Class 4 (more likely to be women; low severity; high levels of anxiety, depression, and reactance).
This study identified the patient profiles that benefitted more from bMI than BA among nontreatment-seeking young adults who present intoxicated to the ED. The findings have implications for intervention design and argue for the importance of research aimed at developing intervention content tailored to patient profiles.
Keywords
alcohol intoxication, brief motivational interviewing, emergency department, latent class analysis, moderation analysis
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
03/08/2023 16:06
Last modification date
13/12/2023 8:19
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