Literature DB >> 20053226

Alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs: future directions for screening and intervention in the emergency department.

Rebecca M Cunningham1, Steven L Bernstein, Maureen Walton, Kerry Broderick, Federico E Vaca, Robert Woolard, Edward Bernstein, Fred Blow, Gail D'Onofrio.   

Abstract

This article is a product of a breakout session on injury prevention from the 2009 Academic Emergency Medicine consensus conference on "Public Health in the ED: Screening, Surveillance, and Intervention." The emergency department (ED) is an important entry portal into the medical care system. Given the epidemiology of substance use among ED patients, the delivery of effective brief interventions (BIs) for alcohol, drug, and tobacco use in the ED has the potential to have a large public health impact. To date, the results of randomized controlled trials of interventional studies in the ED setting for substance use have been mixed in regard to alcohol and understudied in the area of tobacco and other drugs. As a result, there are more questions remaining than answered. The work group developed the following research recommendations that are essential for the field of screening and BI for alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs in the ED. 1) Screening--develop and validate brief and practical screening instruments for ED patients and determine the optimal method for the administration of screening instruments. 2) Key components and delivery methods for intervention--conduct research on the effectiveness of screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) in the ED on outcomes (e.g., consumption, associated risk behaviors, and medical psychosocial consequences) including minimum dose needed, key components, optimal delivery method, interventions focused on multiple risk behaviors and tailored based on assessment, and strategies for addressing polysubstance use. 3) Effectiveness among patient subgroups--conduct research to determine which patients are most likely to benefit from a BI for substance use, including research on moderators and mediators of intervention effectiveness, and examine special populations using culturally and developmentally appropriate interventions. 4) Referral strategies--a) promote prospective effectiveness trials to test best strategies to facilitate referrals and access from the ED to preventive services, community resources, and substance abuse and mental health treatment; b) examine impact of available community services; c) examine the role of stigma of referral and follow-up; and d) examine alternatives to specialized treatment referral. 5) Translation--conduct translational and cost-effectiveness research of proven efficacious interventions, with attention to fidelity, to move ED SBIRT from research to practice. (c) 2009 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 20053226     DOI: 10.1111/j.1553-2712.2009.00552.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Emerg Med        ISSN: 1069-6563            Impact factor:   3.451


  50 in total

1.  Emergency Department Utilization Among Assault-Injured Youth: Implications for Youth Violence Screening.

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2.  The Cumulative Burden of Mental, Substance Use, and General Medical Disorders and Rehospitalization and Mortality After an Injury.

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Review 4.  A meta-analysis of brief alcohol interventions for adolescents and young adults: variability in effects across alcohol measures.

Authors:  Emily E Tanner-Smith; Mark D Risser
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5.  Ethnoracial differences in emergency department patients' tobacco use.

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6.  A brief motivational interview in a pediatric emergency department, plus 10-day telephone follow-up, increases attempts to quit drinking among youth and young adults who screen positive for problematic drinking.

Authors:  Judith Bernstein; Timothy Heeren; Erika Edward; David Dorfman; Caleb Bliss; Michael Winter; Edward Bernstein
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7.  Substance use and posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms in trauma center patients receiving mandated alcohol screening and brief intervention.

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8.  Gender, violence and brief interventions for alcohol in the emergency department.

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9.  Trial study design to test a bilingual digital health tool for alcohol use disorders among Latino emergency department patients.

Authors:  Federico E Vaca; James Dziura; Fuad Abujarad; Michael V Pantalon; Allen Hsiao; Craig A Field; Gail D'Onofrio
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10.  Methodology and Demographics of a Brief Adolescent Alcohol Screen Validation Study.

Authors:  Julie R Bromberg; Anthony Spirito; Thomas Chun; Michael J Mello; T Charles Casper; Fahd Ahmad; Lalit Bajaj; Kathleen M Brown; Lauren S Chernick; Daniel M Cohen; Joel Fein; Tim Horeczko; Michael N Levas; Brett McAninch; Michael Monuteaux; Colette C Mull; Jackie Grupp-Phelan; Elizabeth C Powell; Alexander Rogers; Rohit P Shenoi; Brian Suffoletto; Cheryl Vance; James G Linakis
Journal:  Pediatr Emerg Care       Date:  2019-11       Impact factor: 1.454

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