| Literature DB >> 21690169 |
Graeme B Wilson1, Catherine A Lock, Nick Heather, Paul Cassidy, Marilyn M Christie, Eileen F S Kaner.
Abstract
AIMS: To ascertain the views of general practitioners (GPs) regarding the prevention and management of alcohol-related problems in practice, together with perceived barriers and incentives for this work; to compare our findings with a comparable survey conducted 10 years earlier.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21690169 PMCID: PMC3156887 DOI: 10.1093/alcalc/agr067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alcohol Alcohol ISSN: 0735-0414 Impact factor: 2.826
GP and practice characteristics in 2009 and 1999
| Measure | 2009 sample | 1999 sample |
|---|---|---|
| Mean age (SD) | 47 years (9.25) | 51 years (8.51) |
| % male | 57 | 76 |
| Mean years in practice (SD) | 16 (9.19) | 13 (8.30) |
| Mean days in practice/week (SD) | 4.2 (1.03) | 5.3 (1.03) |
| Modal category patients seen/week (%) | 100–150 (50) | >150 (48) |
| % urban practices | 50% | 50% |
| % group practices | 86% | 78% |
| Mean no. practice partners (SD) | 3.9 (2.15) | 3.4 (1.88) |
Fig. 1.Number of hours of post-graduate training, continuing medical education or clinical supervision on alcohol.
Fig. 2.Number of times a blood test was taken or requested because of alcohol.
Fig. 3.Number of patients managed specifically for alcohol problems per year.
SAAPPQ results: 2009–1999 comparison
| SAAPPQ component | % agree 2009 | % agree 1999 | df | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| With problem drinkers: | |||||
| Legitimacy | 88 | 87 | 0.126 | 501 | 0.900 |
| Adequacy | 78 | 72 | −2.756 | 496 | 0.006 |
| Motivation | 42 | 23 | −2.445 | 497 | 0.015 |
| Self-esteem | 53 | 20 | 0.303 | 495 | 0.762 |
| Satisfaction | 15 | 13 | −1.469 | 501 | 0.143 |
| With dependent drinkers: | |||||
| Legitimacy | 87 | 87 | 0.091 | 501 | 0.927 |
| Adequacy | 69 | 61 | −2.882 | 499 | 0.004 |
| Motivation | 35 | 24 | −3.182 | 499 | 0.002 |
| Self-esteem | 49 | 28 | −1.729 | 493 | 0.084 |
| Satisfaction | 12 | 7 | −2.198 | 500 | 0.028 |
Suggested barriers to intervening for alcohol
| Perceived barrier | 2009 % agreement | 1999 % agreement | df | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doctors are just too busy dealing with the problems people present with | 63 | 69 | 1.973 | 491 | 0.049 |
| Doctors are not trained in counselling for reducing alcohol consumption | 57 | 58 | 0.957 | 487 | 0.339 |
| aDoctors are not sufficiently encouraged to work with alcohol problems in the current GMS contract | 48 | - | - | - | - |
| Doctors do not have suitable counselling materials available | 46 | 47 | 0.760 | 486 | 0.448 |
| Doctors believe that alcohol counselling involves family and wider social effects, and is therefore too difficult | 41 | 48 | 1.658 | 484 | 0.098 |
| Doctors do not believe that patients would take their advice and change their behaviour | |||||
| Doctors do not know how to identify problem drinkers who have no obvious symptoms of excess consumption | 30 | 29 | 0.773 | 490 | 0.440 |
| Doctors themselves may have alcohol problems | |||||
| Doctors do not have a suitable screening device to identify problem drinkers who have no obvious symptoms of excess consumption | |||||
| Doctors themselves have a liberal attitude to alcohol | |||||
| Doctors think that preventive health should be the patients' responsibility not theirs | |||||
| Doctors feel awkward about asking questions about alcohol consumption because saying someone has an alcohol problem could be seen as accusing them of being an alcoholic | 22 | 23 | 0.135 | 488 | 0.893 |
| Doctors have a disease model training and they don't think about prevention | |||||
| Doctors believe that patients would resent being asked about their alcohol consumption | 17 | 20 | 0.468 | 486 | 0.640 |
| Alcohol is not an important issue in general practice |
aModified from ‘The government health scheme does not reimburse doctors for time spent on preventive medicine’ – not compared with 1999 here.
Suggested incentives to intervening for alcohol[]
| Perceived incentive | 2009 % agreement | 1999 % agreement | df | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| aGeneral support services (self-help/counselling) were readily available to refer to | 87 | 80 | −1.407 | 495 | 0.160 |
| Early intervention for alcohol was proven to be successful | 81 | 75 | −0.428 | 495 | 0.669 |
| Patients requested health advice about alcohol consumption | 80 | 72 | −1.748 | 495 | 0.081 |
| Quick and easy counselling materials were available | − | ||||
| Quick and easy screening questionnaires were available | − | ||||
| Training programmes for early intervention for alcohol were available | − | ||||
| Public health education campaigns in general made society more concerned about alcohol | 66 | 61 | −0.586 | 495 | 0.558 |
| bProviding early intervention for alcohol was included in the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF) | − | ||||
| Salary and working conditions were improved |
aModified from ‘Support services were readily available to refer patients to’.
bModified from ‘Training in early intervention for alcohol was recognized for continuing medical education credits’.
GPs' agreement with effectiveness of government policies in reducing alcohol-related harm
| Policy | Very effective or quite effective % agreement |
|---|---|
| Increased provision for treatment of alcohol problems | 25% |
| Introduction of powers to ban anti-social drinking in areas | 24% |
| Introduction of powers to ban individuals from premises/areas following alcohol-related anti-social behaviour | 22% |
| Increased provision for brief interventions to prevent alcohol problems | 20% |
| Promotion of recommended guidelines on drinking limits and health information | 18% |
| Increased powers to enforce and penalize breach of licence conditions | 18% |
| Sharpened criminal justice for drunken behaviour | 18% |
| Introduction of local alcohol strategies | 17% |
| Stricter rules for the content of alcohol advertisements | 13% |
| More extensive considerations when granting licenses | 13% |
| Promotion of a ‘sensible drinking’ culture | 11% |
| Introduction of more flexible opening hours licensed premises | 5% |
GPs' agreement with potential effectiveness of suggested policies in reducing alcohol-related harm
| Policy | Effective or very effective % agreement |
|---|---|
| Improve alcohol education in schools | 71% |
| Further regulation of alcohol off-sales (e.g. supermarkets, off-licences) | 57% |
| Institute minimum pricing for units of alcohol | 55% |
| Increase restrictions on TV & cinema alcohol advertising | 54% |
| Lower blood alcohol concentration limit for drivers | 53% |
| Make public health a criterion for licensing decisions | 49% |
| Raise minimum legal age for purchasing alcohol | 48% |
| General changes in alcohol price through taxation | 48% |
| Statutory regulation of alcohol industry | 43% |
| Raise minimum legal age for drinking alcohol | 39% |
| Government monopoly of retail sales of alcohol | 27% |