Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research
Article
first published online: 29 JUL 2013
Open Article
Background
In a
previously published randomized controlled trial (Brown et al. Alcohol Clin Exp
Res 2010; 34, 292–301), our research team showed that a 30-minute brief
motivational interviewing (BMI) session was more effective in reducing percentages
of risky drinking days in drunk driving recidivists than a control
information–advice intervention at 12-month follow-up. In this sequel to the
initial study, 2 main hypotheses were tested: (i) exposure to BMI increases the
time to further arrests and crashes compared with exposure to the control
intervention (CTL) and (ii) characteristics, such as age, moderate the benefit
of BMI.
Methods
A sample of
180 community-recruited recidivists who had drinking problems participated in
the study. Participants gave access to their provincial driving records at
baseline and were followed up for a mean of 1,684.5 days (SD = 155.7) after
randomization to a 30-minute BMI or CTL session. Measured outcomes were driving
arrests followed by convictions including driving while impaired (DWI),
speeding, or other moving violations as well as crashes. Age, readiness to
change alcohol consumption, alcohol misuse severity, and number of previous DWI
convictions were included as potential moderators of the effect of the interventions.
Results
For
arrests, Cox proportional hazards modeling revealed no significant differences
between the BMI and the CTL group. When analyses were adjusted to age tertile
categories, a significant effect of BMI in the youngest age tertile (<43 years
old) emerged. For crashes, no between-group differences were detected.
Conclusions
BMI was
better at delaying DWI and other dangerous traffic violations in at-risk
younger drivers compared with a CTL similar to that provided in many remedial
programs. BMI may be useful as an opportunistic intervention for DWI recidivism
prevention in settings such as DWI courts. Treatment effectiveness studies are
needed to ascertain how the present findings generalize to the real-world
conditions of mandated relicensing programs.
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