Abstract

Background: The extent to which eligible individuals in a target population are willing to participate in interventions is important when evaluating the efficacy of public health interventions.Objectives: As part of a process evaluation of an ongoing randomized controlled trial, this study aimed to identify the proportion of risky drinkers who were willing to participate in an alcohol prevention intervention in an occupational health setting, and correlates for such willingness.Methods: Risky drinking employees from 22 companies in Norway were identified through an alcohol screening survey. Risky drinkers' (N = 779) willingness to complete a health examination and to be randomized into an alcohol prevention intervention (digital or face-to-face intervention, or control) was recorded by personnel from occupational health services. The proportion of employees who were willing to participate was assessed on 31 potential correlates (sociodemographic, alcohol-related, work-related, and lifestyle/daily activity). Adjusted (multiple logistic regression) analyses were utilized to explore associations between potential correlates and willingness to participate.Results: Altogether, 38.1% of employees were willing to participate in prevention interventions. In the adjusted analysis, only 5 out of 31 potential correlates were significantly associated with willingness to participate. Managers were more than twice as willing to participate than workers (OR = 2.17, p < 0.01). Willing employees had less workplace decision latitude (perceived control over workplace decisions and less possibility of utilizing personal skills in the job) (OR = 0.62, p < 0.05), and were more overcommitted with exorbitant work ambition and need for approval (OR = 1.49, p < 0.05). Willing employees had to some extent less alcohol-related impaired work performance (presenteeism, OR = 0.78, p < 0.05), and they spent less time on care activities (OR = 0.84, p < 0.05).Conclusions: Reaching four out of ten with risky drinking habits for prevention interventions strengthens the rationale for targeting this public health problem in occupational health care settings. In particular, this study suggests the importance of ensuring secure commitment among workers, who were less willing til participate than managers. Nevertheless, tailoring recruitment and implementation strategies based on easily identifiable correlates may be onerous.

Highlights

  • A large body of evidence has linked harmful alcohol consumption to detrimental health outcomes [1, 2], and reducing such consumption has been identified as a keystone in sustainable development of health [3, 4]

  • Of 779 eligible risky drinking employees, 297 (38.1%) were willing to participate in an alcohol prevention intervention, while 481 (61.9%) were not

  • This study, conducted in a heterogeneous sample of employees in Norway, aimed to estimate the proportion of risky drinkers who were willing to participate in an alcohol prevention intervention in an occupational health setting, and to explore correlates for such willingness

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Summary

Introduction

A large body of evidence has linked harmful alcohol consumption to detrimental health outcomes [1, 2], and reducing such consumption has been identified as a keystone in sustainable development of health [3, 4]. A considerable proportion of employees (one to three out of ten) can be characterized as risky drinkers, who may benefit from alcohol prevention interventions [6]. The majority of risky drinkers are part of the active workforce [8], and primary research as well as systematic reviews have demonstrated that employees’ alcohol consumption is associated with sickness absence [9,10,11,12,13,14], as well as with presenteeism (impaired on-the-job performance due to health impairments, e.g., hang over episodes) [15,16,17,18,19]. According to estimates from 2006, alcohol-related absenteeism alone was identified to carry an annual economic burden of 30–65 billion U.S dollars on a global scale [20]. The extent to which eligible individuals in a target population are willing to participate in interventions is important when evaluating the efficacy of public health interventions

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