| Literature DB >> 29732288 |
Hendrika L Hattingh1, Robert J Tait2.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Globally, the use of alcohol is a leading cause of mortality and morbidity. Opportunistic screening and brief interventions (SBIs) have been shown to be effective in reducing alcohol consumption in certain primary care settings and provide a means of reaching some of those who do not seek treatment for alcohol-related problems. Further, community pharmacies have the potential to reach consumers at an early stage of their alcohol use and incorporate intervention and advice into their role in providing medications. AIM: The purpose of this review was to inform pharmacists and stakeholders of the evidence base for SBI in community pharmacy settings. To date, there has been limited research on the effectiveness of alcohol SBI in community pharmacies, with a systemic review only identifying two randomized trials.Entities:
Keywords: alcohol; brief intervention; community pharmacy; primary care; review; screening
Year: 2018 PMID: 29732288 PMCID: PMC5927143 DOI: 10.2147/IPRP.S140431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Integr Pharm Res Pract ISSN: 2230-5254
Overview of community pharmacy alcohol-misuse intervention studies
| Study design | Short description of research | Country | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Focus groups | Two focus groups conducted with 14 community pharmacists. Participants acknowledged alcohol advice as part of role but identified need to increase knowledge, skills, and confidence | Australia | Dare et al |
| Mixed methods: survey and interviews Survey | Five pharmacies provided SBI to 50 consumers who completed AUDIT. Post-SBI survey and 3-month follow-up interviews showed acceptability of service. Ten pharmacists interviewed were positive about service | Australia | Hattingh et al |
| One hundred and eighty-eight people aged >60 years responded. 50% of men and 65% of women were receptive to having alcohol-related health conversations with community pharmacists | Australia | Wilkinson et al | |
| Randomized controlled trial | Parallel group randomized trial involved 16 community pharmacies and 407 pharmacy customers in London. Customers completed AUDIT; those who scored 8–19 were allocated to SBI or leaflet. At 3 months, 326 participants were followed up. SBI appeared to have no effect, and follow-up interactions recommended | UK | Dhital et al |
| Mixed methods: interviews, focus group, and observation | Face-to-face survey of 150 consumers about pharmacy-based alcohol services incorporated FAST. Nine participants of focus group to design a service. Five pharmacies participated in 2-month pilot of 164 screenings, with 15% AUDIT score of increased risk, 12% high risk, and 5% possibly dependent | UK | Krska and Mackridge |
| Interviews | Clients requesting emergency contraception completed AUDIT: 22 clients identified as “low risk” interviewed were positive about service; most of 53 in “risky” category felt advice was useful and appropriate to be provided by a pharmacist | UK | Brown et al |
| Mixed methods: survey and interviews | Twenty-six community pharmacies provided SBI to 141 consumers who completed AUDIT-C. Follow-up interviews with 61 hazardous/low-risk drinkers showed significant reduction in 7-day alcohol-unit consumption, but not AUDIT-C scores | UK | Khan et al |
| Survey | Cross-sectional, anonymous survey through 43 randomly selected NZ community pharmacies. 2,384 consumers completed AUDIT-C, with 30% considered risky drinkers. Attitudes to pharmacy SBI were generally positive | NZ | Sheridan et al |
| Interviews | Interviews with 22 English and 18 NZ pharmacists. Pharmacists were mostly positive about pharmacy SBI. Barriers and facilitators identified | NZ and UK | Horsfield et al |
| Survey | Survey of all community pharmacies in Scotland, with 45% (487 of 1,098) response rate. Knowledge of recommended alcohol-intake limits was high (84%), but few (5%) advised consumers on alcohol consumption. Approximately 25% were confident in providing SBI. Mixed views on appropriateness of pharmacy-based SBI services | UK | McCaig et al |
| Interviews | Interviews with pharmacists from 43 NZ pharmacies that handed out surveys to customers about alcohol use and pharmacy SBI services | NZ | Sheridan et al |
| Mixed methods: survey and interviews | Purposive sampling to select four London pharmacies. 237 consumers approached, 89 completed AUDIT-C, 51 (52%) identified as risky drinkers, 97 (96%) willing to discuss drinking, and 99 (98%) to accept information | UK | Dhital et al |
| Interviews | Nine pharmacists and 13 assistants trained over 2 days. They were positive about training | UK | Fitzgerald et al |
| Survey | Postal survey of community pharmacies, with 39.1% response rate. Participants’ general knowledge of alcohol content of drinks and recommended safe-drinking limits was poor, but they were motivated to undertake an SBI role | NZ | Sheridan et al |
| Mixed methods: survey and interviews | They recruited 70 clients over 3 months. FAST used to screen and guide the intervention: 30 screened as drinking hazardously (42.9%) and seven (10%) positive for harmful drinking; 19 at 3-month follow-up positive about the experience | UK | Fitzgerald et al |
Abbreviations: SBI, screening and brief intervention; AUDIT-C, Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test—consumption (items 1–3 from AUDIT); FAST, Fast Alcohol Screening Tool; NZ, New Zealand.
Key alcohol-screening and brief intervention studies in primary health care
| Study type | Short description of research | References |
|---|---|---|
| Systematic review of reviews | 2002–2012: 24 systematic reviews of 56 trials of SBI in primary care. Extensive evidence supported benefit for middle-aged males with at-risk drinking: fewer data on other groups | O’Donnell et al |
| Clinical guideline | Task force recommended that clinicians screen adults for alcohol misuse and provide risky drinkers with brief behavioral counseling interventions | Moyer |
| Cost-effectiveness | Model costs of screening all new registrations with family doctors and at next appointment. Both approaches were cost-effective, eg, saving of £120 m over 30 years or £6,900/QALY gained | Purshouse et al |
| Systematic review | Review of 22 trials (n=7,619): those receiving SBI had significantly lower alcohol use at 12 months, but not successful with the smaller subgroup of eight trials reporting outcomes by sex | Kaner et al |
| Systematic review | Nineteen trials (n=5,639) showed mean reduction of 38 g alcohol per week for SBI compared with controls, with benefits for both males and females at 6 and 12 months | Bertholet et al |
| Systematic review | Thirty-four trials with nontreatment-seeking people. Effect sizes at 3 months of SBI versus control: composite measure, | Moyer et al |
Abbreviations: SBI, screening and brief intervention; QALY, quality-adjusted life year.