Description:
Abstract Introduction: Advice is a widely recommended and practised intervention with young drug users. Study of precisely how advice is given and received in any setting has, however, been limited. Design and Methods: We qualitatively analysed 106 audio‐recordings of advice sessions on cannabis use for young people within a randomised trial. Inductive data analysis was guided by a focus on practitioner behaviour which served to engage the active participation of the young drug user in the session. Results: A cluster of ‘Information Management’ activities was identified together with an ‘Interactive Orientation’ evident in a series of specific behaviours. Participants were most successfully engaged when both were combined, understood here as ‘Personalised Advice‐giving’. Discussion and Conclusions: These components identified in this exploratory study might assist further research in rectifying the absence of a solid empirical basis for effective practice in advice giving with young drug users and more widely.[Faulkner N, McCambridge J, Slym RL, Rollnick S. It ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it: A qualitative study of advice for young cannabis users. Drug Alcohol Rev 2009;28:129–134]