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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation | OTHER |
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The Responsible Retailing Forum ("RRF") seeks to develop a new intervention, Stop Service to Obviously- Impaired Patrons ("S-STOP"), to reduce the incidence and harm associated with overservice of alcohol. Modeled after RRF's effective program to reduce alcohol sales to minors using Mystery Shopper feedback on staff ID-checking conduct, SSTOP would (1) conduct "Pseudo-Intoxicated" Mystery Shop" ("P-I/MS") inspections of serving establishments, employing actors who seek to purchase an alcohol beverage while showing obvious signs of intoxication, (2) provide licensees with confidential feedback on actual staff conduct and a video link to view the behavior of the P-I/MS that visited their establishments, (3) provide staff with brief online training in the recognition and skillful refusal of service to intoxicated patrons, and (4) provide communities with a measure of the prevalence of overservice. The proposed study will: (1) determine the effectiveness of S-STOP in improving recognition and refusal to serve an obviously- impaired customer. To do this, we will implement S-STOP in 10 pairs of demographically matched college and university communities, employing a cross-over design. After a 3-month baseline, we will implement S- STOP in one community in each pair (Cohort 1), while the second community serves as a control (Cohort 2). After 6 months, we will end S-STOP in Cohort 1 communities but continue inspections to measure the effects of decay; and we will begin S-STOP in Cohort 2. (2) examine how licensees utilize the S-STOP program and the extent to which utilization moderates the effectiveness of the program. To do this, we will measure the number and percentage of managers who visit the S-STOP website and register their staff for training, measure the number of staff that complete the training, and conduct analyses to investigate the dose-response relationship between utilization of the S-STOP program and likelihood of overservice. (3) investigate why some owner/managers did not participate in S-STOP. To achieve this, we will interview 20 owner-managers who did not access the S-STOP website.
The Responsible Retailing Forum (RRF) has developed a community-based program - S-STOP (Stop Service To Obviously-Impaired Patrons) - that assists communities and their on-premises alcohol establishments to address the problems of over-service of alcoholic beverages. S-STOP is a six-month program, administered by RRF, which:
In this project, we will conduct and evaluate S-STOP in selected college and university communities in California.
Specific Aim 1 of this project is to demonstrate the effectiveness of S-STOP in reducing over-service. To achieve this, RRF will conduct a randomized control trial using a cross-over design. We will:
Specific Aim 2 is to examine how licensees utilize the S-STOP program within their establishments and the extent to which utilization moderates the effectiveness of the program. To achieve this aim, we will:
Specific Aim 3 is to investigate why some owner/managers did not participate in S-STOP in order to improve the program. We will:
• Interview 20 owner-managers who did not access the S-STOP website to find out why and determine how the program might be modified to encourage their use of it.
The S-STOP program has three key components:
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cohort 1-Early Intervention | Experimental | Following baseline, participating outlets in this arm will receive the S-STOP program consisting of Pseudo-Intoxicated Mystery Shops (P-I/MS) with performance feedback for 3 months. After 3 months they will receive no further intervention, but will continue to receive Pseudo-Intoxicated Mystery Shops (P-I/MS). |
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| Cohort 2-Delayed Intervention | Experimental | Following baseline, participating outlets in this arm will receive receive Pseudo-Intoxicated Mystery Shops (P-I/MS) with no feedback. After 3 months they will receive the S-STOP program consisting of Pseudo-Intoxicated Mystery Shops (P-I/MS) with performance feedback. |
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| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S-STOP | Behavioral | Pseudo-intoxicated patrons will enter each participating establishment and attempt to be served an alcoholic beverage. In the intervention phases, feedback on staff performance will be provided to owners/managers along with supporting materials and a link to a website with a video of a typical pseudo-intoxicated patron. Staff will be provided with a link to a website providing tips for preventing overservice. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Change in Refusal of Service | The primary outcome is service/refusal of service to a pseudo-intoxicated patron. | Once monthly over 9 months (3 months baseline; 3 months Early Intervention; 3 months Delayed Intervention. |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Brad Krevor, Ph.D. | Responsible Retailing Forum | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RRForum | Waltham | Massachusetts | 02451-0621 | United States |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D000435 | Alcoholic Intoxication |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D019973 | Alcohol-Related Disorders |
| D019966 | Substance-Related Disorders |
| D064419 | Chemically-Induced Disorders |
| D001523 | Mental Disorders |
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We will: (a) identify ten pairs of matched college/university communities for a total of 20 communities; (b) recruit a minimum of 12 on-premises serving establishments in each community for participation in the project; (c) conduct 3 Pseudo-Intoxicated Mystery Shop (P-I/MS) baseline inspections in all participating outlets in all 20 communities to observe pre-intervention over-service conduct; (d) randomly assign one community from each pair to receive S-STOP immediately (Cohort 1) and the other (Cohort 2) to serve as a control group and then to receive S-STOP later; (e) implement S-STOP in Cohort 1 communities for 3 months and conduct P-I MS in Cohort 2 control communities with no feedback to the licensees or community; (f) at the end of the 3 months, end S-STOP in Cohort 1 communities, but continue unreported P-I/MS and begin S-STOP in Cohort 2 communities for 3 months.
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