| Literature DB >> 28599632 |
Jane Derges1, Judi Kidger2, Fiona Fox2, Rona Campbell2, Eileen Kaner3, Matthew Hickman2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Systematic reviews of alcohol screening and brief interventions (ASBI) highlight the challenges of implementation in healthcare and community-based settings. Fewer reviews have explored this through examination of qualitative literature and fewer still focus on interventions with younger people.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28599632 PMCID: PMC5466741 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4476-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Inclusion & exclusion criteria
A brief outline of selected papers
| Authors & country | Study aims | Methods & analysis | Strengths | Weaknesses | Findings: facilitators | Findings: barriers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M Aalto, P Pekuri and K Seppa [ | Identification of obstacles for GPsa and nurses in screening and brief intervention for heavy drinkers |
| Innovative approach to looking at heavy drinking among patients | Lack of representativeness due to small numbers (18 GPs, 19 nurses) in one practice setting | Positive views about the need to address alcohol use with heavy drinking patients (and recognition that this extends to youth drinking) | Confusion over terms ‘early phase heavy drinking’, and ‘alcohol dependence’; pessimism about worth of addressing alcohol use; role responsibility ie addiction clinic better suited to address alcohol use; impact on doctor/ patient relationship; lack of guidelines |
| A Beich, D Gannik and K Malterud [ | Qualitative study to explore GPs views of AUDIT in their daily practice |
| Included questions on use of alcohol screening with young people | Did not use transcriptions for coding, but direct from audio tapes, which might have lost some detail despite being used ‘to minimise loss of shades of meaning’ | One doctor said he would try to incorporate the questionnaire into his practice | Doctors said they would not screen their patients for alcohol use, because: difficult to implement in normal flow of work; affected a ‘person-centred’ approach to patient interaction; additional workload |
| Broyles et al., (2012) [ | Prospective study to identify the potential barriers and facilitators associated with nurse-delivered alcohol screening, BIb and RTc for hospital patients |
| Early example of a study looking at professionals’ own alcohol consumption | Due to prospective nature of study, features were anticipated, rather than experienced in relation to barriers to implementation of SB and RT | Potential facilitators: development of knowledge, skills, communication and collaboration. Also expansion of roles in provision of care | Lack of alcohol-related knowledge and skills; poor communication across disciplines around alcohol-related care; poor alcohol assessment procedures and integration with e-records; concerns about negative reaction and limited motivation among patients; issues of compatibility in screening, BI and RT and healthcare philosophy and role; structural issues e.g. lack of time |
| N Fitzgerald, H Molloy, F MacDonald and J McCambridge [ | To explore the impact of training for community-based staff in Scotland, in use of ABId |
| Wide variety of health and community-based staff were interviewed | Telephone interviews only | Some increase in knowledge, or confidence in using the tool | Three themes identified: majority said they had not encountered appropriate clients with whom to use ABI; tool did not fit with practice or role; clients problems were too severe and therefore use of ABI was considered inappropriate |
| AJ Gordon, L Ettaro, KL Rodriguez, J Mocik and DB Clark [ | Examines primary care providers, adolescents and parents attitudes to SBIRT in rural health setting |
| Comprehensive exploration of professional, adolescent and parents attitudes to SBIRT | Limited to small rural area | All were enthusiastic about computer-based interventions | Provider’s lacked training, tools and onward referral options; adolescents worried about confidentiality |
| Hutchings et al. (2006) [ | To examine acceptability and feasibility of using SBIe in primary care settings |
| Explored both patients’ and professionals’ diverse perspectives about who should implement ASBI in primary care setting | Small number of participants | Practice nurses seen as appropriate in addressing alcohol use, especially when ‘lifestyle’ issues needed to be raised | GPs and nurses: lack of awareness of importance of alcohol problems; ‘light’ drinkers considered more likely to benefit from SBI than ‘heavy’ drinkers; SBI should be addressed as ‘lifestyle’ intervention; worried about giving offence; work overload; young people’s alcohol use better addressed through educational institutions, not primary care |
| K Johansson, I Akerlind and P Bendtsen [ | To identify to what extent nurses are willing to be involved in alcohol prevention |
| Addresses potential solutions from nurse perspective, in relation to screening strategies | Although a qualitative study, paper was written as a short communication and so lacked depth | Nurses felt they had learned new skills and had improved their skills in identifying risky drinking behaviour | Alcohol prevention seen as one among many interventions within role remit; preferred to screen only if a problem was identified first, and if onward referral services existed; worried about damaging relationship with patient; seen as ‘time consuming’; and lack of ‘self-efficacy’ |
| M Keurhorst, M Heinen, J Colom, C Linderoth, U Mussener, K Okulicz-Kozaryn, J Palacio-Vieira, L Segura, F Silfversparre, L Slodownik, et al. [ | Looked at why screening not taking place with high risk patients |
| Example of newer method (Realist Evaluation) used to address the ‘how’ and ‘why’ questions regarding implementation process | Professional backgrounds of participants were different within each country, making any generalisation to other settings difficult | Training and support improved knowledge, skills and prioritisation of alcohol as an issue | Implementing electronic BI required more guidance than was available |
| CA Lock, E Kaner, S Lamont and S Bond [ | Exploration nurses attitudes to brief screening and why it is underutilised in primary care |
| Sets out a clear future agenda in terms of nurses involvement in alcohol-related interventions | Small sample size | Acknowledged importance of alcohol use as a health issue; could identify a need; perceived themselves as in best position to address alcohol use | Lack of training and preparation in alcohol intervention use; lack of confidence; lack of institutional support |
| C May, T Rapley and E Kaner [ | To investigate how primary care practitioners were using aspects of brief interventions in their practice |
| Useful exploration of context: contrast of experience-led vs protocol-led practices | In exploring theoretically, the practice-research gap, there was less focus on recommendations for bringing the two components together less specific detail on how this might be promoted or supported for researchers | Practitioners own independent approaches to managing alcohol use amongst clients | Practice-research gap limited the acceptability of alcohol interventions |
| P Nygaard and OG Aasland [ | Qualitative study investigating barriers in implementing alcohol SBI amongst GPs |
| Identified issue of prevention versus intervention | Focused on GPs exclusively | If issue was about an intervention resulting from a recognized alcohol problem, GPs were more likely to use SBI | Raising issue of alcohol due to ‘stigma’; integration into GPs daily practice; prevention vs. treatment conflict; organisational limitations; potentially negative impact on relationships with patients |
| AK Rahm, JM Boggs, C Martin, DW Price, A Beck, TE Backer and JW Dearing [ | Evaluation of SAMHSAf and SBIRTg by mixed health-care practitioners |
| Early study eliciting patient views and perspectives of alcohol screening | Not generalisable to other studies where more limited resources might preclude use of clinical psychologists in implementing SBIRT | Psychologists effectively replaced nurses & doctors as screeners of alcohol use | Time limitations and prioritisation of other issues; organisational leadership was limited; training alone was not adequate – support of institution also recommended |
| CWM Tam, N Zwar and R Markham [ | To understand reasons for the low uptake of screening tools including AUDIT-C, among GPs |
| Identifies the role of local context and socio-cultural perceptions of alcohol and its use | Small study and findings therefore limited | Detecting ‘at-risk’ drinking seen as important (but difficult) | Social and cultural barriers to asking about alcohol consumption; dynamics of patient-doctor interactions; alcohol screening questionnaires lack practical utility; community stigma and stereotypes of “problem drinking”; GP perceptions of unreliable patient alcohol use histories; and perceived threat to the patient-doctor relationship |
| AE Whittle, SM Buckelew, JM Satterfield, PJ Lum and P O’Sullivan [ | To evaluate a curriculum, pre- and post-training, aimed at improving confidence of clinicians working with adolescents, using SBIRT & MIh |
| Focus on evaluation of training, using information, workshop, observation of professionals using intervention with immediate feedback, and feedback from professionals after using intervention | Feedback given in writing, not verbally, which means some opportunities lost for further understanding and might have led to overvalued perspective | Improvement in skills; confidence in approaching alcohol use with young people; ability to self-reflect; opportunity to practice using interventions in training sessions | MI more time-consuming as an approach; knowing when to use MI or another approach, which might be more suitable |
| Williams, et al. (2016) [ | To understand the process of implementation and ‘factors underlying quality problems’ in ASBI from the perspective of frontline staff in VAi primary health care |
| Effective use of conceptual analytic framework - [ | Site-specific limitations and therefore questionable generalizability to other settings | Staff considered alcohol use an important issue that required intervention within primary care settings | Implementation did not address training and infrastructure needs; lack of standardization; limited understanding of the goals of SBI; alcohol considered ‘specialists’ role; limited availability of treatment resources; negativity regarding patients’ interest in help-seeking |
aGP General Practitioner
bBI Brief intervention
cRT Referral for Treatment
dABI Alcohol Brief Intervention – term used in paper
eSBI is the term used in paper
fSAMHSA Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration
gSBIRT Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral for Treatment
hMI Motivational Interviewing
iVA Veterans Health Administration