Personality, Behavioral Dysregulation, and Targeted Interventions Across Addictive and High-Risk Behaviors
5 - (3-MIN 1) Drinking and Affective Outcomes of a Small Randomized Clinical Trial for Hazardous Drinkers with Negative Affect: A Comparison of Three Treatment Conditions
Thursday, June 25, 2026
10:16 AM - 10:27 AM PDT
Location: Yerba Buena Salon 5, B3 Level
Keywords: CBT, Addictive Behaviors, Anxiety Recommended Readings: Black, J.J., Tran, G.Q., Goldsmith, A.A., Thompson, R.D., Smith, J.P & Welge,J.A. (2012). Alcohol expectancies and social self-efficacy as mediators of differential intervention outcomes for college hazardous drinkers with social anxiety. Addictive Behaviors, 37(3), 248-245., Piccirillo, M. L. et al. (2025). Examining the longer‐term efficacy of brief, alcohol‐focused personalized feedback interventions for individuals with internalizing distress: Secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial, Addiction, 120(8), 1666–1678., Murphy, J. G., Dennhardt, A. A., Martens, M. P., Borsari, B., Witkiewitz, K., & Meshesha, L. Z. (2019). A Randomized Clinical
Trial Evaluating the Efficacy of a Brief Alcohol Intervention Supplemented With a Substance-Free Activity Session or Relaxation
Training. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 87(7), 657-669. Retrieved from
https://rave.ohiolink.edu/ejournals/article/367356245, ,
Associate Professor University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
This NIAAA-funded pilot study developed and tested the effects of a one-session brief intervention that integrated motivational interviewing with personalized feedback report for hazardous drinking and cognitive restructuring for depression and social anxiety symptoms (MCID). MCID was compared to two other one-session interventions on alcohol, depression and anxiety measures: attention-controlled Brief Motivational Intervention (BMI) and written Alcohol Feedback Only (FAD). The intention-to-treat sample (ITT) consisted of 85 undergraduate students who were randomized to receive MCID (n=29), BMI (n=28) or FAD (n=28). On average, participants reported 51.05 alcoholic drinks and 4.76 heavy drinking days in the past month and scored in subclinical range of negative affect (depression, social anxiety, and/or generalized anxiety). All groups showed significant improvement on alcohol and negative affect measures between pre-intervention and follow-ups at two and/or four months post-intervention. To test this pilot study's main study hypotheses that MCID will show greater reduction in alcohol and negative affect behaviors during treatment follow-up, greater emphasis was placed on treatment effect sizes (p2) than p-values for the interaction effects given the small sample size. Effect sizes (ES) were determined from partial p2 values of Treatment*Time interaction effects. Small-to-medium and medium interaction effects were found for total alcohol consumption at 2-month and 4-month follow-up, respectively. Group mean scores showed greater consumption reduction in MCID and BMI compared to FAD participants, but no difference between MCID and BMI groups. Small interaction effects were found for heavy drinking frequency at both 2-month and 4-month. Similar to alcohol indicators, negative affect variables showed mixed results. In contrast to study prediction, BMI participants reported greater reduction compared to other intervention groups on generalized anxiety and social anxiety symptoms at 2-month, with both indicating medium effect sizes. Treatment changes were similar across the three interventions for depression. Study mixed results did not support the addition of cognitive restructuring for depression or anxiety to one-session alcohol interventions for hazardous drinkers with subclinical negative affect. The findings suggest that these intervention recipients need more than one session to benefit from cognitive restructuring for maladaptive thoughts associated with negative affect.
Learning Objectives:
Describe the efficacy and limitations of Brief Interventions for hazardous drinking and negative affect (depression, social anxiety, and generalized anxiety).