Friend-based Intervention to Reduce Alcohol-Involved Sexual Assault Risk
State University of New York at Buffalo
Summary
This Phase 2 trial will to examine the efficacy of a brief dyad-based motivational interview (PAIRS MI) delivered to friend dyads with an active treatment-as-usual condition, and a 1-year follow-up.
Description
In this project the investigators will conduct a Phase 2 trial to test the efficacy of a friend-based motivational interview (FMI) compared to a treatment-as-usual (TAU) control, following participants over 1-year post-intervention (Aim 1.). With this trial the investigators also will address some key questions about FMI effects on target attitudes and behaviors (Aim 2.a.) that may be mechanisms of intervention outcome (Aim 2.b.). This includes Instrumental mechanisms (readiness, barriers, and assault protective behavior skills), and the dyadic relationship (closeness, collaboration between th…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18–24 years
- Sex
- Female
- Healthy volunteers
- Yes
Inclusion Criteria: * Women * 4 or more drinks in a single sitting 2 or more times monthly in the past 3 months * does not live at home with parents * reports going out (not necessarily drinking) with the other member of their dyad \> 1/week Exclusion Criteria: * Can not speak and understand English sufficiently
Interventions
- BehavioralFriend-Based Motivational Interview
The intervention will use Motivational Interviewing's (MI) collaborative conversation style for strengthening commitment to change, to motivate and prepare women to work together to reduce Sexual Assault (SA) risk. This intervention will target ways that the friend dyad may support, encourage, and share responsibility with one another in protecting against SA. The Friend-based MI (FMI) will then use the responsibility and relationship of friends as a framework to foster collaborative efforts to increase readiness and decrease barriers to helping behavior. As part of this, the FMI will focus on the identification and implementation of skills friends can use to help one another prevent sexual assault. FMI will include a focused discussion of the ways drinking may impede helping efforts. Moreover, the FMI will encourage women to identify personal, specific strategies for reducing the effects of alcohol on helping.
- BehavioralTreatment as usual (TAU)
This 65-minute single-session stand-alone course is a supplemental component of the EverFi (Vector Solutions) Sexual Assault Prevention for Undergraduate Students prevention suite that is administered in an online didactic format. All participants (intervention and control) will have completed the basic course of the Sexual Assault Prevention for Undergraduate Students at matriculation, per university requirements. For the current study, the supplemental Healthy Relationships component will be administered only to participants assigned to the control condition. Healthy Relationships focuses on relationship skills, strategies for taking action in risky situations, and intervention skill practice.
Location
- University at Buffalo Department of PsychologyBuffalo, New York