Brief alcohol interventions for adolescents and young adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Emily E Tanner-Smith, Mark W Lipsey, Emily E Tanner-Smith, Mark W Lipsey

Abstract

This study reports findings from a meta-analysis summarizing the effectiveness of brief alcohol interventions for adolescents (age 11-18) and young adults (age 19-30). We identified 185 eligible study samples using a comprehensive literature search and synthesized findings using random-effects meta-analyses with robust standard errors. Overall, brief alcohol interventions led to significant reductions in alcohol consumption and alcohol-related problems among adolescents (g = 0.27 and g = 0.19) and young adults (g = 0.17 and g = 0.11). These effects persisted for up to 1 year after intervention and did not vary across participant demographics, intervention length, or intervention format. However, certain intervention modalities (e.g., motivational interviewing) and components (e.g., decisional balance, goal-setting exercises) were associated with larger effects. We conclude that brief alcohol interventions yield beneficial effects on alcohol-related outcomes for adolescents and young adults that are modest but potentially worthwhile given their brevity and low cost.

Keywords: Adolescents; Brief alcohol intervention; Meta-analysis; Systematic review; Young adults.

Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Study identification flow diagram
Figure 2
Figure 2
Scatter plots of method-adjusted effect sizes and posttest follow-up timing, by age group and outcome type Notes: Effect sizes adjusted for study method characteristics and shown proportionate to random-effects inverse variance weights. Fitted values and confidence intervals from meta-regression with robust variance estimates. Dashed line shown at null value of zero.

Source: PubMed

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