| Literature DB >> 29592801 |
M Mofizul Islam1, Helen T Oni2, K S Kylie Lee3,4, Noel Hayman5,6,7, Scott Wilson8,9, Kristie Harrison10, Beth Hummerston11, Rowena Ivers12,13, Katherine M Conigrave3,9,14.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND AIMS: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Community Controlled Health Services (ACCHSs) around Australia have been asked to standardise screening for unhealthy drinking. Accordingly, screening with the 3-item AUDIT-C (Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test-Consumption) tool has become a national key performance indicator. Here we provide an overview of suitability of AUDIT-C and other brief alcohol screening tools for use in ACCHSs.Entities:
Keywords: AUDIT; AUDIT-C; Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander; Alcohol screening; IRIS; Indigenous
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29592801 PMCID: PMC5875000 DOI: 10.1186/s13722-018-0108-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Addict Sci Clin Pract ISSN: 1940-0632
Fig. 1Diagram summarising procedure for selecting eligible articles for systematic review of alcohol screening among Indigenous Australians. Search terms used: Alcohol (MeSH), Aboriginal (MeSH), Australia (MeSH), Aboriginal OR Indigenous, screening, alcohol AND screening, Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test. AUDIT-C, valid*, (((((Alcohol) AND screening) OR valid*) AND Aboriginal) AND Australia), (((((Alcohol) AND screening) OR Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test) AND Aboriginal) AND Australia), TOPIC: (Alcohol) AND TOPIC: (Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test) AND TOPIC: (Aboriginal) AND TOPIC: (Australia)
Research on alcohol screening tools among Indigenous Australians
| References | Setting (remoteness) | Participants | Screening tool (number of items) | Study type | Some relevant observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Skowron and Smith [ | Port Hedland area (Remote WA)a | Homeless Aboriginal people (n = 162) | CAGEb (4 items) | Quantitative: CAGE compared with clinical interview on drinking | CAGE had reasonable validity in comparison with clinical interview |
| Hunter et al. [ | Kimberley region (Very remote, WA) | Aboriginal community members (n = 516) | CAGE (4 items) (reworded for local use of English) | Quantitative: compared with clinician interview | CAGE scores were associated with frequency of alcohol consumption |
| Brady et al. [ | ACCHS (Urban) | Health staff (n = 14), clients (20) | AUDITd (10 items); Two questions: average days per week the patient drank, and amount and type of drinks per day | Mixed methods | AUDIT was reported by health workers to be long and intrusive |
| Kowalyszyn and Kelly [ | Community setting (Remote far north Queensland) | Aboriginal community members (n = 99) | AUDIT (10 items) | Quantitative: two screening tools compared | High correlation between AUDIT and KAT responses |
| Schlesinger et al. [ | Clinical and non-clinical services (Urban, regional and remote Queensland) | Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander clients of services (n = 175) | IRISf (13 items) | Quantitative: IRIS compared with AUDIT, two dependence scales (SDSg, LDQh), mental health scales, and interview on consumption by Aboriginal community worker | IRIS was validated as a screen for alcohol and drug, and mental health risk |
| Clifford and Shakeshaft [ | ACCHSs: (One urban and one rural, in NSW) | Health staff (n = 32) and patients (n = 24) | AUDIT (10 items) | Mixed methods: survey and group interviews of staff and (separately) of patients | Staff reported: |
| Clifford et al. [ | Five ACCHSs (Urban and regional NSWi) | Health staff (n = 37) | A range of (typically unvalidated) questions that were being used by health services | Qualitative; (semi-structured group staff interviews) | Except in adult health check, screening was generally selective |
| Conigrave et al. [ | Aboriginal community-based groups (Urban NSW) | Aboriginal group participants (n = 47) | AUDIT (10 items) Rephrased for local English use | Quantitative plus researcher observation | AUDIT seemed easy to understand, as long as help was available for individuals not comfortable with reading |
| Lee et al. [ | Alcohol and drug treatment service –mainstream (Urban, NSW) | Staff and Aboriginal patients (n = 21, n = 24 respectively) | AUDIT-C—modifiedj (3 items) | Mixed methods | An interviewer asked the AUDIT-C questions in a conversational style, adapting phrasing as needed |
| Ober et al. [ | Prisons in Queensland | Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander inmates (n = 395) | IRIS—modified (13 items); Asking about substance use in 12-months | Quantitative: compared against CIDI | IRIS was compared against ICD10 criteria for substance use disorders (using CIDI) |
| Calabria et al. [ | Primary care and community-based settings; (urban and regional NSW) | Aboriginal patients and community members (n = 136) | AUDIT-C (3 items) | Quantitative: short forms of AUDIT compared against full AUDIT | AUDIT-C and AUDIT-3 (at appropriate cut-offs) compare favourably to full AUDIT |
| Gray et al. [ | Several sites- ACCHS and community-based (urban through to remote) | Researchers of five studies; plus overview of their results | AUDIT (10 items) | Review of five alcohol studies with Aboriginal people; workshops with the researchers | Few people (Aboriginal or otherwise) have a clear understanding of a ‘standard drink’ and the amounts poured or consumed as ‘a drink’ generally |
| Noble et al. [ | An ACCHS (Regional NSW) | Service clients (n = 188; of whom 72% were Aboriginal) | AUDIT-3mk; (2 items) | Quantitative: compared with 7-day retrospective drinking diary | 81% of Aboriginal current drinkers (n = 69) were equivalently classified by the two measures (weighted kappa = 0.77, 95% CI 0.73, 0.83) |
aWA: the state of Western Australia
bCAGE: four questions which relate to being unable to Cut down on drinking; being Annoyed by people criticising drinking, Guilt about drinking, Eye opener or morning drink to get over adverse effects
cSMAST: 12 items, short Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test
dAlcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT):10 items, with three on consumption, three on dependence and four on harms
eKhavari alcohol test (KAT): 12 questions which enquire into consumption of different types of alcoholic beverages
fIndigenous Risk Impact Screen (IRIS)
gSeverity of Dependence Scale (SDS)
hLeeds Dependence Questionnaire (LDQ)
iNSW: the state of New South Wales
jAUDIT C changes: Q2 was asked before Q1; Q3 was adapted to fit Australian drinking guideline to reduce risk from a single occasion of drinking: “How often would you have four or more standard drinks each time you drink?” Note that respondents were not asked to convert to standard drinks
kAUDIT 3m: The third question of AUDIT modified to fit two Australian drinking guidelines; “How often do you have MORE THAN 4 standard drinks on one occasion?” and “How often do you have MORE THAN 2 standard drinks in one day?” (visual images representing that amount are provided)