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Journal Article

Citation

Suffoletto B, Kristan J, Person Mecca L, Chung T, Clark DB. JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2016; 4(2): e73.

Affiliation

University of Pittsburgh, Department of Emergency Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, United States. suffbp@upmc.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, JMIR Publications)

DOI

10.2196/mhealth.5330

PMID

27335099

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recent trial results show that an interactive short message service (SMS) text message intervention, Texting to Reduce Alcohol Consumption (TRAC), is effective in reducing heavy drinking in non-treatment-seeking young adults, but may not be optimized.

OBJECTIVE: To assess the usability of the TRAC intervention among young adults in an effort to optimize future intervention design.

METHODS: We conducted five focus groups with 18 young adults, aged 18-25 years, who had a history of heavy drinking and had been randomized to 12 weeks of the TRAC intervention as part of a clinical trial. A trained moderator followed a semistructured interview guide. Focus groups were audiotaped, transcribed, and analyzed to identify themes.

RESULTS: We identified four themes regarding user experiences with the TRAC intervention: (1) ease of use, (2) comfort and confidentiality, (3) increased awareness of drinking behavior, and (4) accountability for drinking behavior. Participants' comments supported the existing features of the TRAC intervention, as well as the addition of other features to increase personalization and continuing engagement with the intervention.

CONCLUSIONS: Young adults perceived the TRAC intervention as a useful way to help them reduce heavy drinking on weekends. Components that promote ease of use, ensure confidentiality, increase awareness of alcohol consumption, and increase accountability were seen as important.


Language: en

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