2008
DOI: 10.2196/jmir.1102
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Predicting Successful Treatment Outcome of Web-Based Self-help for Problem Drinkers: Secondary Analysis From a Randomized Controlled Trial

Abstract: Background Web-based self-help interventions for problem drinking are coming of age. They have shown promising results in terms of cost-effectiveness, and they offer opportunities to reach out on a broad scale to problem drinkers. The question now is whether certain groups of problem drinkers benefit more from such Web-based interventions than others.Objective We sought to identify baseline, client-related predictors of the effectiveness of Drinking Less, a 24/7, free-access, interactive, Web-based self-help i… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(54 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
(65 reference statements)
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“…We found no difference in alcohol consumption outcomes between all-male and mixed-gender samples, whereas several studies on face-to-face alcohol interventions in primary care had reported that men were more likely to benefit than women [30], [67]. In the case of Internet-based interventions for alcohol misuse, however, female uptake appears equally as high as male uptake [28], [77] and have been seen to have similar impacts on female and on male drinking, or possibly even greater influence on females, as suggested by Riper and colleagues (2008, [78]). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…We found no difference in alcohol consumption outcomes between all-male and mixed-gender samples, whereas several studies on face-to-face alcohol interventions in primary care had reported that men were more likely to benefit than women [30], [67]. In the case of Internet-based interventions for alcohol misuse, however, female uptake appears equally as high as male uptake [28], [77] and have been seen to have similar impacts on female and on male drinking, or possibly even greater influence on females, as suggested by Riper and colleagues (2008, [78]). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Fifth, not all patients may profit from this particular treatment delivery to the same extent (e.g. patients with low education, which is a known predictor of poor outcomes in Internet-based interventions [49,50]), patients with low Internet literacy or patients already in remission who have a lower relapse risk (anxiety disorders [51]; eating disorders [52]; major depressive disorder [53]). Therefore, subsequent moderator analyses should clarify which subgroups of patients benefit and the extent that they benefit from TIMT.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Riper et al [67,68] found positive results from a web-based self-help program for problem drinkers in the Netherlands. A review of internet-based interventions for traumatic stress-related problems found that eHealth interventions worked as well as in-person treatment programs.…”
Section: Evidence From Ehealth Research On Interventions?mentioning
confidence: 99%