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Latinx Hazardous Drinkers with Clinical Anxiety: Effectiveness Trial of a Personalized Normative Feedback Intervention


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Project Summary/Abstract Despite being one of the largest and fastest-growing demographics in the United States (US), Latinx persons experience striking health disparities, particularly in terms of hazardous drinking and co-occurring clinical anxiety. No interventions to date have targeted hazardous drinking in the context of clinical anxiety among Latinx persons. The current R01 proposal builds upon our past work by developing a brief, single-session, computer-based, personalized feedback intervention (PFI) designed to enhance knowledge regarding adverse anxiety-alcohol interrelations, increase motivation and intention to reduce hazardous drinking, and reduce positive attitudes and intentions regarding the use of alcohol for anxiety. Specifically, we propose to develop a low-cost, highly disseminatable, integrated PFI for Latinx hazardous drinkers with clinical anxiety (AA-PFI 1.0) that will be implemented and tested for effectiveness in community-based health clinics. Our approach will follow a staged model consistent with National Institutes of Health (NIH) guidelines for developing and standardizing behavioral interventions. Phase IA activities will involve collecting qualitative and quantitative feedback from three iterative focus groups (N = 21) to refine intervention content and evaluate treatment acceptability and feasibility. Phase IB activities will include a rigorous randomized clinical trial designed to compare the effectiveness of AA-PFI 2.0 to a control PFI (C-PFI) among a sample of 250 Latinx hazardous drinkers with clinical anxiety who receive care within community-based health clinics. This study represents an important and pivotal step in the larger landscape of translating basic research to more efficacious strategies for reducing hazardous drinking in underserved populations with biobehavioral comorbidities. The proposed research project supports the 2017-2021 strategic plan of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) by advancing research in two of the key areas. First, the current proposal has the end goal of improving strategies to prevent alcohol misuse, alcohol use disorder, and alcohol-related consequences among an ?at-risk? population for these conditions (goal 3). Second, it enhances the public health impact of NIAAA-supported research by focusing on one of the fastest-growing and largest demographics in the US who demonstrate disparities in hazardous drinking (goal 5). The current application aligns with the goals of RFA- AA-21-001 by proposing to examine the effectiveness of a low cost, highly disseminatable, personalized, culturally adapted PFI for Latinx hazardous drinkers with clinical anxiety within community-based health clinics. Given the collective public health impact of concurrent anxiety and alcohol use, we believe the proposed study will yield findings that enhance scientific knowledge, advance our understanding of mechanisms in anxiety- alcohol use relations, and inform the development of novel treatments for hazardous drinkers with clinical anxiety that are adaptable and easily implemented across a variety of healthcare settings.
Collapse sponsor award id
R01AA029807

Collapse Time 
Collapse start date
2021-09-20
Collapse end date
2026-05-31
RCMI CC is supported by the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, National Institutes of Health (NIH), through Grant Number U24MD015970. The contents of this site are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the NIH

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