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Journal Article

Citation

Van Dessel P, Cummins J, Wiers RW. Addiction 2023; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/add.16271

PMID

37349262

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: ABC-training is a new intervention to encourage health behavior change that targets the automatic activation of adaptive beliefs (i.e. automatic inferences). The aim of this proof-of-principle study was to test the effectiveness of web-based ABC-training to change outcome expectancies of alcohol drinking in a sample of hazardous drinkers.

DESIGN: One exploratory and one confirmatory experiment with two between-subject conditions (online ABC- and control-training) and assessments at baseline and 1 week later (after three sessions of training). SETTING: Participants recruited on Prolific Academic completed the web-based study. PARTICIPANTS: Adults with self-reported hazardous alcohol drinking (Experiment 1: 193 adults, United Kingdom, age mean = 46.7 years; Experiment 2: 282 adults, different nationalities, age mean = 38.3 years). INTERVENTION AND COMPARATOR: ABC-training involved completing an online task that required choosing personally relevant alternative behaviors to drinking alcohol in personally relevant antecedent contexts to attain personally important outcomes. Comparator was control-training, in which participants selected both the alternative behaviors and alcohol drinking an equal number of times. Training was completed at baseline, after 3 days and after 1 week. MEASUREMENTS: Primary outcome was change in automatic and self-reported (negative/positive) outcome expectancies of alcohol drinking from baseline to after 1 week. Secondary outcomes were change in weekly alcohol consumption, self-efficacy, craving and motivation (and approach-alcohol associations in Experiment 1). Moderators were baseline outcome scores, motivation, age and alcohol dependency.

FINDINGS: Findings of this study are as follows: stronger increase in negative outcome expectancies after ABC- than control-training (Experiment 1: self-report, 95% confidence interval of difference scores (CI(diff) ) = [0.04, Inf]; automatic, CI(diff)  = [0.01, Inf]; Experiment 2: self-report, CI(diff)  = [0.16, Inf]; automatic, CI(diff)  = [0.002, Inf]). Stronger reduction in self-reported positive outcome expectancies after ABC- than control-training (Experiment 1: CI(diff)  = [-Inf, -0.01]; Experiment 2: CI(diff) = [-Inf, -0.21]) but mixed findings on automatic positive outcome expectancies (Experiment 1: CI(diff)  = [-Inf, 0.02]; Experiment 2: CI(diff)  = [-Inf, -0.001]).

CONCLUSIONS: ABC-training may change outcome expectancies of alcohol consumption, but testing of clinically relevant effects in other samples is warranted.


Language: en

Keywords

cognitive bias modification; ABC-training; addiction; alcohol use disorders; automatic inferences; outcome expectancies; predictive processing

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