| Literature DB >> 29632682 |
Ali Giusto1, Eve Puffer1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Problem drinking accounts for 9.6% of disability-adjusted life years worldwide. It disproportionally affects men and has disabling physical, psychological, and behavioral consequences. These can lead to a cascade of negative effects on men's families, with documented ties to intimate partner violence (IPV) and child maltreatment. These multi-level problems are often exacerbated where poverty rates are high, including low and middle-income countries (LMICs). In contexts where strong patriarchal norms place men in positions of power, family-level consequences are often even more pronounced.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol; family; interventions; low and middle-income countries
Year: 2018 PMID: 29632682 PMCID: PMC5885490 DOI: 10.1017/gmh.2017.32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Ment Health (Camb) ISSN: 2054-4251
Fig. 1.Search flow diagram.
Characteristics of included studies
| Study | Country | Program | Primary aims | Design | Participants | Sample | Mean age (SD) | % Male | Outcomes (Primary = | Significant findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jones | Zambia | The Partner Project | Implemented and compared the effectiveness of a program to decrease high-risk sexual behavior, alcohol use, and intimate partner violence among Zambian couples affected by HIV led by professionals | QE; treatment sequentially randomized to six selected CHC | Seroconcordant & serodisconcordant couples (over 18 years old) who have been together for >6 mos and sexually active in the past 30 days | 394 (197 couples) | 39 (8) | 50%* | Not reduced | |
| Kalichman | South Africa | 1.GBV/HIV intervention | Compared the effectiveness of a gender-based, HIV prevention program to a brief alcohol and HIV intervention targeting sexual risk behavior and IPV among South African men | QE; treatment randomly assigned to 2 matched communities | Men living in two townships | 475 | 30.2 (9.5) | 100% | ALC/HIV> GBV/HIV (1 mo) | |
| Jewkes | South Africa | Stepping Stones 2nd Ed.: HIV prevention program | Evaluated the effectiveness of a behavioral HIV prevention to decrease the incidence of HIV and HSV-2 through improved gender equity and communication among South African men and women | Cluster randomized design | Men and women (12–23 years old) who understood consent | 1360 (70 clusters) | NR ( | 51% | SS>C (12 mo.) | |
| Jewkes | South Africa | Stepping Stones 3rd Ed. & Creating Futures (SS + CF) | Piloted a combined economic empowerment -non-microloan program (CF) and an HIV-prevention program (SS) to decrease GBV, sexual risk and increase economic stability among men and women living in informal settlements | QE; Interrupted time series pilot trial | Out-of-school men and women (18–34 years old) | 232 | NR ( | 47% | Not reduced | |
| Schensul | India | Research and Intervention in Sexual Health; | Evaluated the effectiveness of a community-level STI and alcohol prevention program to decrease sexual health risk, IPV, and alcohol intake among married men from urban community slums in India | QE; two independent pre- post cross-sectional surveys conducted (CSC), plus a longitudinal sample subset followed from pre to post (LP) | Married men (21–40 years old) from slum communities | CSC: Survey1–2600 | NR | 100% | Improved (CSC) | |
| Saggurti | India | Research and Intervention in Sexual Health; | Examined the comparative effectiveness of a brief narrative intervention across trained and untrained providers in reducing the incidence of | QE; 2 (private/public center)X2 (trained/untrained provider) design; 3 communities randomly assigned arms | Married men (21–40 years old) who seek care at experimental or control health clinics, reported a | 736 | 30.9 (5.3) | 100% | Time; BMT > All: reduced | |
| Nattala, | India | 1. Dyadic Relapse Prevention (DRP) | Tested the comparative effectiveness of a relapse prevention program that included or excluded a family member in treatment and a control condition targeting alcohol use and alcohol-related dysfunction in alcohol dependent men admitted to an inpatient hospital in Bangalore, India | QE; pre-post; random treatment assigned | Alcohol dependent (ICD-10) and literate men aged 20–60 who have 1 family member living with him and no co-morbid diagnoses | 87 | 39 (8) | 100% | ||
| Abdollahnejad ( | Iran | Tehran Therapeutic Community (TTC) | Evaluated pre to post outcomes of drug and alcohol use and alcohol-related dysfunction among drug & alcohol abusing men who attended an existing residential living community in Tehran | QE; pre-post | Male drug & alcohol users who completed treatment at TTC | 43 | NR | 100% | ||
| Satyanarayana | India | Integrated Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (ICBI) | Evaluated the effectiveness of an 8-session cognitive behavioral treatment addressing IPV and drinking compared to TAU among married fathers in inpatient treatment for AUD | RCT | Alcohol dependent inpatient men who screened positive for IPV, married with one child younger than 16 | 177 | 38 (6.3) | 100% |
Note: italicized, primary intervention target; >, signifies the arm to the left of ‘>’ saw significant reductions in the associated variable when compared with the other treatment arm; M, male reported (on self); F, female reported (on partner); °, all finding reported refer to statistically significant change not trends for findings of interest-significance refers to statistical significance below a 0.05 alpha; RCT, randomized control trial; QE: Quasi-experimental; grp, group; NR, not reported; IPV, intimate partner violence; BL, baseline; mo, month; wk, week; yo, year old; MHC, biomedical primary health center providers; AYUSH, Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha, Homeopathy providers; TAU, treatment as usual; ICD-10, international classification of diseases; NGO, non-governmental organization; CSC, cross sectional surveys; LP, longitudinal panel; CHC, community health center; GBV, gender-based violence; RES, research-led; SS, stepping stones; CF, creating futures; Y/N, yes or no; ‘gupt rog’, Indian term for sexually transmitted infections, fertility and sexual problems; AUDIT, alcohol use disorders identification test; IRP, individual relapse prevention; DRP, dyadic relapse prevention; TTC, tehran therapeutic community.
Description of interventions
| Program | Format | Amount | Theory | Core intervention strategies | Study | Quality assurance | Therapist | Training |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Partner Project | Single-sex, parallel groups; Couples homework | 4, 2 hr. sessions | Theory of Reasoned Action & Planned Behavior; Formative work | Psychoeducation (e.g., video FAQ) | Jones | Audio recorded session; Quality checklist with 10% sample; Manual | CHC: CHC senior staff selected ‘appropriate’ CHC group leaders | CHC: 2-day dyadic; intervention observation; train-the-trainer |
| 1. GBV/HIV | Small single-sex group (8–12) | 5, 3 hr. sessions; 1 wk | Behavioral theory; social cognitive learning; social constructivist; Formative work | Group support (e.g., songs, chants) | Kalichman | Supervision; Manual | Male & female team; previous HIV counseling experience | Manual, weekly supervision, flip charts with steps |
| 2. ALC/HIV | Small single-sex group (8–12) | 1, 3 hr. session | Psychoeducation | |||||
| Stepping Stones (SS) 2nd Ed.:HIV prevention program | Single-sex, parallel groups + 4 mixed-sex groups | 13, 3 hr. sessions + 3 mixed-gender group + 1 community meeting, 6–8 wks | Adult Education theory (primary); Freirian models of self reflection; Assertiveness training | Group support | Jewkes | Attendance; Manual | PPASA NGO staff, slightly older, education or life skills training; gender sensitive/open-minded | 2 wk. training; two practice groups |
| Stepping Stones (SS) 3rd Ed. & Creating Futures (CF) | Single-sex, parallel groups | SS: 10, 3 hr. session, 1 mixed-gender peer session + | Jewkes | Attendance; ‘ad hoc’ trainer visits to session; Manual | Empower NGO staffers who completed secondary school; experience in health sector & facilitation | Training on gender equity & attitudes, HIV & AIDS, sexual & reproductive health, facilitation skills | ||
| Research and Intervention in Sexual Health: | Community leaflets, videos, movies, discussions | Ecological theory; Formative qualitative work | Schensul | Exposure to messages; Recollection of messages survey | Trained RISHTA staff | NR | ||
| RISHTA: A Brief Narrative Intervention ( | Individual: primary/public or holistic/private care | ~1–3 sessions, 20–40 minutes | Theory-driven ecological approach; Formative qualitative work | Psychoeducation | Saggurti | Recollection of treatment; Manual | 1. AYUSH provider + narrative training; 2. MHC biomendical providers + narrative training; 3. AYUSH or MHC provider with no narrative training | Providers trained in Narrative Intervention by key experts from Population Sciences –Mumbai & The University of Connecticut School of Medicine for 16 hrs., 4 days + 9, 1–2 hr. session over 2 yrs. |
| 1. DRP | DRP: dyadic inpatient therapy + 1 month follow-up | DRP & IRP: | Behavioral theory, Family systems, Family disease approach | Nattala | Sessions observed by center psychiatrist; Attendance; Manual | DRP & IRP delivered by 1st author (psychiatric nurse) | Author trained at hospital >1 yr. | |
| Tehran Therapeutic Community | Residential living community | 6-month, residential treatment | NR | Structured employment hierarchy | Abdollahnejad ( | NR | NR | NR |
| Integrated Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (ICBI) | ICBI: | ICBI: 8 sessions, 45–60 minutes [+TAU] | Cognitive- behavior therapy | Satyanarayana | Session audio tapes reviewed for treatment adherence & fidelity by clinical psychologist | Masters in psychology | Certificate course in ICBI; additional training from lead author |
Note: IPV, intimate partner violence; GBV, gender-based violence; SS, stepping stones; CF, creating futures; RES, research-led; CHC, community health center; DRP, dyadic relapse prevention; IRP, individual relapse prevention; TAU, treatment as usual; NR, not reported; FAQ, frequently asked questions; CSC, cross-sectional survey; CBT, cognitive-behavioral therapy; Q&A, question and answer; AUD, alcohol use disorder; formative work, in-country work or adaptation completed prior to intervention implementation; NGO, non-governmental organization; MHC, biomedical primary health center providers; AYUSH, Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha, Homeopathy providers; PPASA, Planned Parenthood Association of South Africa; hrs., hours; yrs., years; wk.=week.
Contextual and cultural considerations of reviewed interventions
| Study | Program | Country | Setting | Rationale for the intervention | Adaptation Level | Formative Work: Y/N | Notes on adaptation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jones | The Partner Project | Zambia | Six urban Community Health Clinic | High rates of HIV | L; DA of PTT; PF | Yes |
Years of formative research from 1999 on (e.g., multiple previous trials in Zambia) Partnerships with government community advisory boards |
| Kalichman | 1. GBV/HIV | South Africa | Community Health Clinic | High-rates of HIV driven by men | L; DA; Developed-for-setting PTT | Yes |
In-depth focus groups: Men & women from informal settlements Workshops: Collaborators & experts Previous pilot testing |
| Jewkes | Stepping Stones 2nd Ed.:HIV prevention program | South Africa | Rural communities Eastern Cape province | High-rates of HIV | L; SA; PTT | NI# |
Translation and structural surface changes based on setting |
| Jewkes | Stepping Stones 3rd Ed. & Creating Futures | South Africa | Informal settlements | High-rates of HIV | L; SA; Integration of PTTs | NI# |
Translation and structural surface changes based on setting (e.g., excluding peer advocacy component due to financial constraints) Original theory proposed for use in Uganda appears unchanged# |
| Schensul | RISHTA: | India | Three slum communities outside of Mumbai | High-rates of STIs | Developed-for-setting | Yes |
Qualitative interviews: Community-members & key stakeholders |
| Saggurti | RISHTA: | India | 1. AYUSHA Private Healthcare Centers 2.Public Male Health Clinic (MHC) biomedical care center | High-rates of STIs | DA; Developed-for-setting | Yes |
Qualitative interviews: Community-members & key stakeholders |
| Nattala | DRP & IRP | India | National Hospital Deaddiction Center (inpatient) | High rate of alcohol relapse | L; Integrated; CV | Partial |
Integrated existing manuals from USA and India Content translated Expert review: hospital psychiatrists |
| Abdollahnejad ( | Tehran Therapeutic Community | Iran | Residential therapeutic community | High rate of substance use | Already Existing | No | Existing treatment |
| Satyanarayana | ICBI | India | Inpatient hospital | High rates of co-morbid alcohol use and IPV | PTT; DA; Developed for setting | Yes | Formative in-depth interviews: married heavy drinking men who reported to have perpetrated IPV ( |
Note: NI, not enough information to make a determination; #, for this intervention, there is an adapted version of the original manual for South Africa, but the methods for adaptation are not published to our knowledge and as such information from published material is presented, but may miss important aspects of adaptation; CHC, community health clinic; PTT, previously tested treatment; DA, deep adaptation; SA, surface adaptation; CV, content validation; PF, participatory feedback; W, workshop; L, language; UC, unclear; RES, research-led; SSA, sub-Saharan Africa; SA, South Africa; DRP, dyadic relapse prevention; IRP, individual relapse prevention; RISHTA, research and intervention in sexual health: theory to action; NGO, non-governmental organization; STI, sexually transmitted infection; *, time and frequency not reported; NR, not reported; MHC, biomedical primary health center; AYUSH, Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha, Homeopathy providers; GBV, gender based violence; ICBI, integrated cognitive behavioral therapy.
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