| Literature DB >> 26259001 |
Sion Kim Harris1, John R Knight2.
Abstract
Alcohol is strongly linked to the leading causes of adolescent and adult mortality and health problems, making medical settings such as primary care and emergency departments important venues for addressing alcohol use. Extensive research evidence supports the effectiveness of alcohol screening and brief interventions (SBIs) in medical settings, but this valuable strategy remains underused, with medical staff citing lack of time and training as major implementation barriers. Technology-based tools may offer a way to improve efficiency and quality of SBI delivery in such settings. This review describes the latest research examining the feasibility and efficacy of computer- or other technology-based alcohol SBI tools in medical settings, as they relate to the following three patient populations: adults (18 years or older); pregnant women; and adolescents (17 years or younger).The small but growing evidence base generally shows strong feasibility and acceptability of technology-based SBI in medical settings. However, evidence for effectiveness in changing alcohol use is limited in this young field.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 26259001 PMCID: PMC4432859
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alcohol Res ISSN: 2168-3492
Characteristics of Computer-Assisted Alcohol Screening and Brief Intervention (SBI) Studies Conducted in Health Care Settings
| Authors (Year) | Study Population | Setting | Screening and Other Measures | Study Design/Treatment Conditions | Follow-up Period (%Completed) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| English- or Spanish-speaking primary care patients (ages 18–99, | Primary care practices in Massachusetts, New York, and Florida |
Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) Stage-of-change measure | Before-and-after, each site own control:
Control phase ( Treatment phase ( | 6 months (85%) |
Spanish version had lower AUDIT+ detection rates than English version; no such difference found with traditional AUDIT. AUDIT-C scores declined for both groups during followup; no intervention effect; no difference between language groups. | |
| University health service patients screening positive for at-risk drinking (ages 17–29; | University health service in New Zealand |
AUDIT Past-2-weeks alcohol consumption Alcohol Problems Scale | Randomized controlled trial (RCT) three groups:
Single-dose 10-minute Web-based SBI ( Multi-dose Web-based SBI ( Control ( | 6 months (84%) |
Both intervention groups had lower alcohol consumption, AUDIT scores, and alcohol problems at 6 and 12 months compared with the control group. Single-dose and multi-dose effects similar; provision of up to two additional sessions did not increase efficacy. | |
| Primary care patients with risky drinking (ages 18 or older; | Primary care clinics in one Swedish county |
Average weekly use Heavy episodic drinking (HED) occasions per month | Observational study of two cohorts:
“Self-referred” ( “Staff-referred”: ( | 3 months (60%) |
No significant between-group differences at baseline and 3 months. “Staff-referred” had reduction in weekly alcohol use but “self-referred” did not. Significant reduction in HED for both. Follow-up responders more likely to be older, have lower weekly alcohol use at baseline than non-responders; no difference in HED. | |
| Military veterans screening positive for alcohol misuse ( | Veterans Affairs primary care clinics in California |
AUDIT-C Timeline Follow-Back Alcohol-related consequences | RCT two groups:
Intervention ( Control ( | 3 months (86%) |
Alcohol consumption and severity of alcohol-related problems declined for both groups. No differences between groups. | |
| ED patients (ages 18–70, | ED of university hospital in Sweden |
Modified AUDIT-C Patients’ ratings of computerized screening and personalized feedback | Single-group acceptability study: | N/A |
95% rated computer easy to use. 67% rated being screened positively. 76% rated feedback and advice printout positively. 74% preferred printout over nurse or doctor delivery. 93% would read advice. | |
| Sub-critically injured ED patients screening positive for at-risk drinking (ages 19 or older, | Midwestern level 1 trauma center in university hospital |
Frequency of alcohol consumption and HED in past 3 months Drinker Inventory of Consequence— Short Inventory of Problems | RCT four groups: Computerized screening plus computer generated:
Tailored message booklet with clinician-delivered brief advice ( Tailored message booklet only ( Generic message booklet with advice ( Generic message booklet only ( | 3 months (86%) |
All groups reduced mean drinks per week, HED, and alcoholrelated consequences by 12 months. No difference in outcomes between tailored vs. generic message conditions. Brief advice had greater reductions than no advice, particularly among females and those aged 22 and older. | |
| Sub-critically injured ED patients screening positive for at-risk drinking (ages 18 or older, | ED in Germany |
AUDIT Readinessto-Change questionnaire Percent of patients with at-risk drinking (more than 30 g/d men; more than 20 g/d women) | RCT two groups:
Intervention: Standard care plus computerized SBI ( Control ( | 6 months (63%) |
Significant intervention effects at 6 and 12 months: intervention group had lower percent of patients reporting at-risk drinking, and greater decrease in alcohol intake, compared with control subjects. | |
| ED patients screening positive for risky drinking (ages 18–69, | County hospital ED in Sweden |
AUDIT-C | RCT two groups: Computerized screening with printout given to patient of:
“Long-feedback” ( “Short-feedback” ( | 6 months (17%) |
41% of those requested to do computer SBI did. Both groups had reduced weekly alcohol consumption and HED frequency at 6 months. No differences in change over time between groups. 6-month respondents had lower HED frequency at baseline than non-respondents. | |
| English- or Spanish-speaking ED patients (ages 18–65 or older, | University hospital ED in California |
AUDIT Drinks per week | Single-cohort observational study: | 6 months (57%) |
47% of at-risk drinkers reduced drinking to below NIAAA-recommended limits. Decreased frequency of driving while impaired. Reductions greater among those with AUDIT scores higher than 8. | |
| ED patients (ages 18–24; | Urban EDs in Pennsylvania |
AUDIT Timeline Follow-Back | RCT three groups:
Intervention ( Assessment only ( Control ( | 3 months (86%) |
93% of intervention and assessment groups replied Intervention reduced heavy-drinking days and drinks per drinking day more than assessment-only. | |
| ED patients (ages 21–85 years, | ED of urban academic medical center in New York |
AUDIT Patient acceptance and comprehension questionnaire Research staff questionnaire | Single-group feasibility study: | N/A |
98% completed CASI program. 89% liked program. 93% found it easy to use. 90% accurately reported alcohol risk level after program completion. | |
| Hospital outpatients (ages 18 or older, | Hospital ambulatory care center in Australia |
AUDIT Peak blood alcohol concentration (BAC) Leeds Dependence Questionnaire History of Trauma scale | Single-group feasibility study: | Within few days of visit (75%) |
93% of eligible consenting patients completed SBI. 94% found it easy to complete. 95% reported responding honestly. 80% found feedback useful. 96% had no concern about privacy. | |
| Pregnant women screening positive for problem alcohol use (ages 18–45, | Urban prenatal care clinic in Michigan |
T-ACE Timeline FollowBack Readiness to Change Acceptability of software Birth outcome variables | RCT two groups:
Intervention ( Control ( | 1 month (96%) |
High acceptability of computerized screening and BI. Both groups showed significant decline in reported alcohol consumption during followup; no differ-ences between groups. Babies born to BI group had significantly higher birth weight compared with control subjects. | |
| Pregnant African-American women who screened positive for problem drinking but quit during pregnancy (ages 18–29, | Urban prenatal care clinic in Michigan |
T-ACE Alcohol use Acceptability of software Semistructured interview about user experience | Single-group pretesting study | N/A |
High ratings for software approval, ease of use, and perceived helpfulness. Videos and graphs/charts rated most useful components. | |
| Gregor et al. (2003) | ED patients with minor injuries (ages 14–18 years, | ED of academic medical centers in Michigan |
Alcohol Misuse Index of negative consequences of alcohol use Binge-drinking episodes in past 3 months Driving after drinking or riding with a driver that had been drinking | RCT two groups:
Intervention ( Control ( | 3 months (93%) | Overall sample
94% liked program, 74% reported it made them rethink their alcohol use, 5% needed assistance to use it. No differences in alcohol outcomes between intervention and control: both decreased from baseline to 3 months, but returned to baseline levels by 12 months. Alcohol misuse and binge drinking lower at 12 months in intervention group. |
| ED patients with past-year violence and alcohol use (ages 14–18, | Urban ED in Michigan |
AUDIT-C POSIT Conflict Tactic scale Violence consequences | RCT three groups:
Computerized BI ( Therapist-delivered BI ( Both 35 minutes and based on motivational interviewing, with normative feedback and skills training Control ( | 3 months (86%) |
3 months: computer and therapist BI groups showed similar significant reductions in positive alcohol and violence attitudes, increases in refusal self-efficacy. 6 months: Both BI groups less likely to report alcohol-related consequences than control group, but no effect on drinking frequency. 12 months: significant therapist-BI effect on peer aggression and victimization; no BI effect (computer or therapist) on any alcohol variables. | |
| Primary care patients (ages 12–18, | Primary care clinics in New England, and Prague, Czech Republic |
CRAFFT screener Timeline Follow-Back Postvisit questionnaire Personal Consequences Scale | Before-and-after, each site own control:
Control phase (USA/CZR Intervention phase (USA/CZR | 3 months (73%/88%) |
3 months: cSBA significantly reduced alcohol use rates compared with TAU in USA sample but not in CZR sample. Larger cSBA cessation effect found among drinking youth with peer risk (having friends who drank). 12 months: cSBA effect attenuated but still significant among New England youth. | |
| ED patients screening positive for risky drinking (ages 14–20, | Urban ED in Michigan |
AUDIT-C Alcohol-related consequences (RAPI) Psychological constructs related to behavior change: – Importance of cutting back – Likelihood to cut down in next 30 days – Readiness to stop – Desire for help to cut down | RCT three groups:
Computerized BI ( Therapist-delivered BI ( – Both BI had tailored normative feedback, based on motivational interviewing and cognitive–behavioral strategies Control ( | Immediate posttest (99%) |
Increased importance of change in both BI groups compared with control groups. Increased readiness to stop in Therapist BI group. BI components positively related to changes in psychological constructs: Computer BI – Benefits of change – Alternate activities – Choosing goal to reduce or stop Both – Tools for reducing or stopping use – Personal strengths review | |
NOTES: Abbreviations:
AUDIT-C: Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test—Consumption items (items 1–3)
CASI: Computerized alcohol screening and intervention
CRAFFT: Car, Relax, Alone, Forget, Family/Friends, Trouble
PCP: Primary care provider
POSIT: Problem Oriented Screening Instrument for Teenagers
RAPI: Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index
T-ACE: Mnemonic for 4-item screener for problem alcohol use (Tolerance, Annoyed, Cut down, Eye-opener)