Article

Effectiveness of the use of implementation intentions on reduction of substance use: A meta-analysis

Details

Citation

Malaguti A, Ciocanel O, Sani F, Dillon JF, Eriksen A & Power K (2020) Effectiveness of the use of implementation intentions on reduction of substance use: A meta-analysis. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 214, Art. No.: 108120. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2020.108120

Abstract
Objective Background: Substance use, such as alcohol drinking, tobacco smoking and illicit drug use, have been associated with severe health conditions and an annual estimated 12 % of all deaths worldwide. Implementation intentions are self-regulatory processes which help achieve health-related behaviour change. Objectives: To investigate the effectiveness of forming implementation intentions to reduce substance use. Design Data sources: PsycINFO, MEDLINE, Psychology and Behavioural Science Collection, clinicaltrials.gov, UK Clinical Trials Gateway, Reference lists. Inclusion criteria: RCT of substance users forming implementation intentions to reduce consumption (active or passive control condition present). Study appraisal and synthesis methods: the SIGN checklist for RCT quality was used for quality appraisal, data was extracted by two reviewers. Results Twenty-one studies were included in the meta-analysis. The overall effect size for alcohol use was g = 0.31 (95 % CI: 0.21, 0.42), p < .001; for tobacco smoking g = 0.31 (CI: 0.12, 0.5), p = .002; no studies were retrieved for the use of implementation intentions on illicit drug use. Conclusion This review suggests that implementation intention interventions are effective in reducing some forms of substance use (alcohol use and tobacco smoking), albeit revealing small effect sizes, among the general population and students in secondary and higher education. Review registration number: CRD42018116170.

Keywords
Implementation intentions; Substance use; Alcohol; Tobacco smoking; Behavior change

Journal
Drug and Alcohol Dependence: Volume 214

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of Dundee
Publication date01/09/2020
Publication date online26/06/2020
Date accepted by journal02/06/2020
ISSN0376-8716
eISSN1879-0046