| Literature DB >> 24533631 |
Deborah S Hasin1, Efrat Aharonovich, Eliana Greenstein.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Heavy drinking jeopardizes the health of patients in HIV primary care. In alcohol dependent patients in HIV primary care, a technological enhancement of brief intervention, HealthCall administered via interactive voice response (HealthCall-IVR) was effective at reducing heavy drinking. The smartphone offered a technology platform to improve HealthCall.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24533631 PMCID: PMC3943503 DOI: 10.1186/1940-0640-9-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Addict Sci Clin Pract ISSN: 1940-0632
Figure 1The two components of HealthCall.
Figure 2Flowchart of pilot study participants . aStudy of HealthCall-Smartphone (HealthCall-S) enhancement of Motivational Interviewing for drinking reduction: New York City HIV primary care alcohol dependent patients at baseline; patients enrolled June 2012-July 2012. bDrinking eligibility (≥4 drinks, ≥1 day, past 30 days) identical to the previous 3-arm MI + Healthcall-IVR randomized trial [35]; alcohol dependence an additional eligibility requirement. c Other eligibility requirements included absence of psychosis, being actively suicidal or homicidal, severely cognitive impaired using Halstead-Reitan Trails A. These requirements were identical to the previous 3-arm MI + Healthcall-IVR randomized trial [35].
HealthCall-Smartphone script for daily self-monitoring calls
| 1. Friendly welcome greeting that varies by daya | Reinforce HealthCall-S use; add variety to daily script |
| 2. Request to enter password | Ensure privacy |
| 3. Statement that questions are about yesterday (morning, afternoon, evening or during the night) | Standardize timeframe regardless of when HealthCall-S is used |
| 4. Number of drinks of beer, wine, liquora,b? | |
| 5. How much wanted to drink? | |
| 6. Optional view of graph showing number of drinks daily over prior 7 daysa,b | |
| 7. Thought about pros and cons of drinkingb? (yes/no) | Remind patient of MI session to |
| 8. Thought about drinking reduction goalb? (yes/no) | Remind patient of MI goal to |
| 9. How important was drinking reduction? | |
| 10. How committed to drinking reduction? | |
| 11. IF DRANK: Reasons for drinkinga (yes/no to nine reasons, e.g., around others who drank; to improve mood; habit)? | Identify drinking motives and triggers (internal and social-contextual) |
| 12. IF DID NOT DRINK: Reasons for not drinkinga (yes/no to nine reasons, e.g., my health; made commitment not to; no money for alcohol; feel good when do something positive for self)? | |
| 13. Statement praising abstinence or meeting drinking goal (4 rotated, different statements), | |
| 14. Statement of one of 30 daily “tips” in random order (suggestions on how to cut down drinking or maintain abstinence)a | Suggest skills to patients for cutting down or staying abstinent based NIAAA evidence-based materials; also to add variety to daily script |
| 15. Drug use? | Identify potential substitute substance use pattern |
| 16. If on ART, were all HIV meds taken? | Self-monitoring of ART; identify if alcohol and ART adherence are linked |
| 17. If had sex, was it protectedb? | Self-monitoring of sexual risk behaviors |
| 18. Felt well physically? Stressed? Angry? sad/depressed? how was day overall? (5 yes/no questions)b | |
| 19. If reported at-risk drinking, counselor call offered via one-touch link to counselor’s phone/voicemaila | Provide counselor assistance if wished |
| 20. Outgoing tailored goodbye (15 versions) | Reinforce HealthCall-S use based on patients’ input and date/day of the week/weekend; add variety. |
aquestion or statement via video of the counselor (others heard and accompanied by text on screen).
baccompanied by visual image (photo or drawing) on the screen.
Patient characteristics in pilot study and historical comparison group
| Sociodemographic binary variablesa | % | % | |
| Female | 28.2 | 18.6 | 0.30 |
| Ethnicity | | | |
| African American | 61.5 | 51.2 | 0.34 |
| Hispanic | 25.6 | 41.9 | |
| Other | 12.8 | 07.0 | |
| Spanish-speaking | 10.3 | 11.6 | 0.84 |
| High school education | 74.4 | 58.1 | 0.12 |
| Married/Stable relationship | 05.1 | 16.3 | 0.11 |
| Employed | 25.6 | 11.6 | 0.10 |
| Residentially instable | 30.8 | 27.9 | 0.78 |
| Clinical variables | | | |
| Drug dependence | 10.3 | 23.3 | 0.12 |
| Antisocial personality disorder | 15.4 | 20.9 | 0.52 |
| Beck depression inventory ≥17, indicating clinical depression | 08.0 | 06.7 | 0.85 |
| Continuous variablesb | Mean (s.d.) | Mean (s.d.) | |
| Age, years | 45.5 (11.5) | 46.0 (7.2) | 0.51 |
| Years since HIV diagnosis | 11.5 (8.4) | 14.9 (7.4) | 0.04 |
| Drinks per drinking day (NumDD) | 9.3 (6.9) | 8.1 (3.9) | 0.84 |
| Percent days abstinent (PDA) | 58.1 (27.4) | 61.3 (24.2) | 0.81 |
| DSM-IV dependence criteria count | 5.8 (1.1) | 4.9 (1.7) | 0.03 |
| Beck Depression Inventory | 7.5 (6.9) | 5.3 (5.9) | 0.18 |
agroup differences tested with chi-square.
bgroup differences tested with Kruskal Wallis test.
Patient feedback on HealthCall-S procedures at end of final appointment
| Reminded them of drinking goal | 86.49 | 10.81 | 2.70 |
| Reminded them of initial meeting with counselor | 67.57 | 18.92 | 13.51 |
| | |||
| Felt HealthCall-S responses were safe | 94.59 | 5.41 | 0.00 |
| Concerns about privacy using Healthcall-S | 37.84 | 0.00 | 62.16 |
| Liked using Healthcall-S | 91.89 | 2.70 | 5.41 |
| Surprised by the drinking pattern shown in 30-day graph | 56.76 | 8.11 | 35.14 |
| Helped remember drinking quantity, frequency | 83.78 | 10.81 | 5.41 |
| Helped understand drinking quantity, frequency | 91.89 | 5.41 | 2.70 |
| Increased motivation to reduce drinking | 81.08 | 16.22 | 2.70 |
| Increased confidence could reduce drinking | 83.33 | 13.89 | 2.78 |
| HealthCall graph increased interest in HealthCall-S | 86.49 | 8.11 | 5.41 |
| HealthCall graph increased perceived benefit of HealthCall-S | 91.89 | 5.41 | 2.70 |