Restaurant employees often have high rates of heavy drinking and problems with  alcohol. 
This study evaluates reductions in drinking and associated problems at  work, in connection with a new program for prevention and early intervention.  The program, called Team Resilience, is designed for young restaurant workers. 
A cluster-randomized trial design was used, with 28 stores from a  national casual-dining restaurant chain and 235 of their employees (54% male,  46% female). Fourteen stores received the Team Resilience training workshop,  consisting of three 2-hour sessions held on 3 consecutive days. Sessions  included group discussion, role-play and practice activities, and a learning  game. 
Workers in trained stores reported significantly greater  decreases in recurring heavy drinking (i.e., having five or more drinks on the  same occasion, on 5 or more days in the past month) and work-related problems  with alcohol than workers in control stores. In the intervention group, the odds  of recurring heavy drinking declined by about one half and the number of  work-related problem areas declined by one third following training. In  addition, drinking behaviors and problems were tied to age and were most common  among employees in their middle 20s. 
Findings support Team  Resilience as an effective intervention for reducing drinking and associated  problems among young restaurant workers, a population with substantial needs.
 
