Alcohol Use Disorders- Mobile Based Brief Intervention Treatment (AMBIT): Technological innovation to bridge the treatment gap for hazardous drinking

AMBIT is a two-year project that is aimed at developing and evaluating a contextually appropriate mobile based brief intervention treatment to reduce hazardous drinking among adults in low resource settings.

AMBIT also aims to 1) Examine if it is acceptable/feasible to deliver such an intervention in an Indian setting; 2) Conduct preliminary testing to see if the intervention helps in reducing drinking; and 3) Fine-tune procedures for the definitive testing of the effectiveness of the intervention. The aims of the program will be achieved through a range of processes including identification of the existing evidence; development of the intervention in partnership with our technology partner and utilising feedback from a range of individuals and groups including hazardous drinkers; refinement of the intervention; and testing of its preliminary impact.

The output of this treatment development process would be a contextually acceptable and feasible mobile technology- delivered BI package which can then be tested in a larger trial.  If successfully developed and found to be cost-effective, our intervention can reach millions of people across the world (as mobile phone use has increased exponentially even across the developing world) and could be a real game changer in the field of public health.

 

Project Team

Prof Abhijit Nadkarni – Principal Investigator

Professor Richard Velleman – Co-Investigator

Sheina Paula Pereira Costa – Project Coordinator

 

Funder

Medical Research Council, UK

 

Project partners

VIAMO (Votomobile India Pvt. Ltd.)

Project details

Countries
India
Project status
The project began in September 2017 and is currently in its formative phase
Key words
Alcohol use disorders, Hazardous drinking, Brief interventions, Mobile Based Technology
External links
Project contact