Evaluation of an Interactive Mobile Phone-Based Brief Intervention to Reduce Substance-Impaired Driving
NCT ID: NCT05537116
Last Updated: 2025-08-13
Study Results
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Basic Information
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ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
NA
240 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2022-10-18
2026-03-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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In the past few years, a number of interventions using text-messaging to target substance use and problems have been developed and evaluated with reviews and meta-analyses suggesting that the majority of these interventions result in improved outcomes and warrant further large scale studies. Most of these interventions target overall substance use and problems and do not focus on specific risk behaviors, such as substance-impaired driving. We have developed and evaluated a mobile-based BI focused specifically on decreasing AI-driving among college students in a pilot trial. This study indicated that a brief, mobile-based AI-driving intervention including MI text messaging resulted in significantly greater reductions in AI-driving at the 3-month follow-up, compared to alcohol information alone. We modified the intervention to focus on driving after cannabis use and found that the intervention resulted in significantly greater increases in perceived dangerousness of DACU and significantly greater decreases in DACU compared to to an informational control condition. Importantly, several recent studies have demonstrated greater effectiveness of interventions that include personal contact vs. those that are fully automated. The present study provides an important bridge between in-person therapist delivered interventions and fully automated interventions by utilizing interactive text messaging with participants in order to enhance retention of intervention elements and provide tailored, individualized interaction. It is imperative to directly test whether the use of interactive text-messages decreases substance-impaired driving significantly more than personalized feedback alone.
The proposed study will extend promising pilot results by: (a) increasing power by recruiting 240 emerging adults reporting recent driving after cannabis use (DACU), (b) including a 6-month follow-up to determine whether intervention effects persist over time, (c) examining mediators of intervention outcomes (e.g., changes in cannabis-related cognitions), and (d) providing additional intervention content focused on decreasing driving after combined use of alcohol and cannabis. The overarching goal is to use mobile technology to reduce driving after substance use among emerging adult cannabis users.
We will conduct a 3-group trial with 240 emerging adults (ages 18-25; project 50% female; 20% minority) recruited from a community in the Southeastern United States.
Group 1: substance impaired driving personalized feedback Group 2: substance impaired driving personalized feedback and Motivational Interviewing (MI) interactive text messages Group 3: substance use information (control) Aim 1: Evaluate a text based substance-impaired driving intervention in a Randomized Clinical Trial.
Hypothesis 1: Group 2 will report greater reductions in driving after cannabis use and driving after simultaneous alcohol and cannabis use 3- and 6-months post-intervention.
Aim 2: Evaluate mechanisms of intervention response. Hypothesis 1: Cognitive factors (e.g., changes in perceptions of dangerousness and consequences, peer norms, cannabis expectancies) will mediate intervention outcomes.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Personalized Feedback
Following the baseline assessment, participants will be sent a link via text message to a secure website containing substance-impaired driving specific personalized feedback. Feedback will include the following elements: a personalized substance use profile and substance-impaired driving profile, information on social norms related to substance use and substance-impaired driving, personalized information on BAC (or level of impairment due to drug use) prior to driving, costs associated with a DUI citation in Kentucky, and information on combined drug and alcohol impaired driving risk (if endorsed).
Personalized feedback
Following the baseline assessment, participants will be sent a link via text message to a secure website containing substance-impaired driving specific personalized feedback. Feedback will include the following elements: a personalized substance use profile and substance-impaired driving profile, information on social norms related to substance use and substance-impaired driving, personalized information on BAC (or level of impairment due to drug use) prior to driving, costs associated with a DUI citation in Kentucky, and information on combined drug and alcohol impaired driving risk (if endorsed).
Personalized feedback and text messages
Following the baseline assessment, participants will be sent a link via text message to a secure website containing substance-impaired driving specific personalized feedback (described above). Participants will be asked to send a text message back to the study administrator after viewing the feedback document. After confirming receipt and processing of the document, the study administrator will then send the participant three text messages containing open-ended questions.
Personalized feedback and text messages
Following the baseline assessment, participants will be sent a link via text message to a secure website containing substance-impaired driving specific personalized feedback (described above). Participants will be asked to send a text message back to the study administrator after viewing the feedback document. After confirming receipt and processing of the document, the study administrator will then send the participant three text messages containing open-ended questions.
Information only
Students randomized to the information condition will receive standard information about alcohol and other drugs and substance-impaired driving via a link to a website delivered through text message.
Information Only
Students randomized to the information condition will receive standard information about alcohol and other drugs and substance-impaired driving via a link to a website delivered through text message.
Interventions
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Personalized feedback
Following the baseline assessment, participants will be sent a link via text message to a secure website containing substance-impaired driving specific personalized feedback. Feedback will include the following elements: a personalized substance use profile and substance-impaired driving profile, information on social norms related to substance use and substance-impaired driving, personalized information on BAC (or level of impairment due to drug use) prior to driving, costs associated with a DUI citation in Kentucky, and information on combined drug and alcohol impaired driving risk (if endorsed).
Personalized feedback and text messages
Following the baseline assessment, participants will be sent a link via text message to a secure website containing substance-impaired driving specific personalized feedback (described above). Participants will be asked to send a text message back to the study administrator after viewing the feedback document. After confirming receipt and processing of the document, the study administrator will then send the participant three text messages containing open-ended questions.
Information Only
Students randomized to the information condition will receive standard information about alcohol and other drugs and substance-impaired driving via a link to a website delivered through text message.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Ability to speak, read, and write in English
* Reports driving after using cannabis prior to driving at least three times in the past three months
* Reports having access to a motor vehicle, a valid driver's license, and plans to drive a vehicle in the next 6 months
* Reports access to a cell phone and willingness to read intervention material and exchange 3 texts post intervention with the study administrator
* Reports a valid email address
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
29 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Western Kentucky University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Jenni Teeters, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Western Kentucky University
Locations
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Kelly Thompson Hall
Bowling Green, Kentucky, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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22-012
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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