| Literature DB >> 35879719 |
Shannon M Smith-Bernardin1,2, Leslie W Suen3,4, Jill Barr-Walker5, Isabel Arrellano Cuervo6, Margaret A Handley7,8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Internationally, strategies focusing on reducing alcohol-related harms in homeless populations with severe alcohol use disorder (AUD) continue to gain acceptance, especially when conventional modalities focused on alcohol abstinence have been unsuccessful. One such strategy is the managed alcohol program (MAP), an alcohol harm reduction program managing consumption by providing eligible individuals with regular doses of alcohol as a part of a structured program, and often providing resources such as housing and other social services. Evidence to the role of MAPs for individuals with AUD, including how MAPs are developed and implemented, is growing. Yet there has been limited collective review of literature findings.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol use disorder; Harm reduction; Homelessness; Managed alcohol program; Scoping review
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35879719 PMCID: PMC9311344 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-022-00646-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart of included studies in the review. *Consider, if feasible to do so, reporting the number of records identified from each database or register searched (rather than the total number across all databases/registers). **If automation tools were used, indicate how many records were excluded by a human and how many were excluded by automation tools. From: Page MJ, McKenzie JE, Bossuyt PM, Boutron I, Hoffmann TC, Mulrow CD, et al. The PRISMA 2020 statement: an updated guideline for reporting systematic reviews. BMJ 2021;372:n71. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.n71. For more information, visit: http://www.prisma-statement.org/
All articles included in scoping review
| Author | Title | Year | Country | Methodological approach | Setting/MAP intervention | Sample size (MAP only) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Podymow, T.; Turnbull, J.; Coyle, D.; Yetisir, E.; Wells, G | Shelter-based managed alcohol administration to chronically homeless people addicted to alcohol | 2006 | Canada | Pre–post evaluation within subject of shelter-based MAP program | Ottawa, Canada. MAP provides shelter with bed and meals, medication administration, daily RN and weekly MD visits, ADL support, care coordination | 17 MAP program participants; 1 MAP program |
| Francoeur, N., Vachon, F., & Scott, G | No place like home: housing and harm reduction | 2009 | Canada | Cross-sectional interview, and survey on housing needs among attendees at one-day "Housing people experiencing persistent homelessness" workshop ( | Waterloo, Canada | N/A |
| London Homeless Coalition | Managed alcohol: housing, health and hospital diversion—exploring a managed alcohol model for the city of London | 2011 | Canada | Cross-Sectional feasibility assessment for MAP based on interviews with persons with lived experience ( | London, Ontario, Canada | N/A |
| Evans, J | Supportive measures, enabling restraint: governing homeless “street drinkers” in Hamilton, Canada | 2012 | Canada | Longitudinal cohort study with In-depth interviews, observation of program operations, and document review | Hamilton, Canada MAP based in residential housing with on-site physician and nursing care, counseling, social services, 24/7 support with activities of daily living | 24 MAP participants; 2 MAP staff; 1 MAP program |
| Stockwell, T; Pauly, B; Chow, C; Vallance, K; Perkin, K | Evaluation of a managed alcohol program in Vancouver, BC: Early findings and reflections on alcohol harm reduction | 2013 | Canada | Pre–post evaluation of a pilot study with pre–post comparison within subject | Station Street MAP in Vancouver Canada implemented in 2011. MAP located in Housing first permanent housing/residence building | 7 MAP participants; 1 MAP program |
| Evans, J.; Semogas, D.; Smalley, J. G.; Lohfeld, L | “This place has given me a reason to care”: Understanding “managed alcohol programs” as enabling places in Canada | 2015 | Canada | Qualitative study with interviews and focus groups | MAP in Ontario Canada that had been in operation for 5 years. 16 bed capacity for men. Provides permanent housing, shared rooms, three meals daily. Daily access to RN, registered practical nurses, and social service providers. Weekly access to family practice physicians | 10 MAP participants; 1 program |
| Ezard, N; Dolan, K; Baldry, E; Burns, L; Day, C; Hodge, S; Cubitt, T; Loesch, B; Mackay, T | Feasibility of a managed alcohol program (MAP) for Sydney’s homeless | 2015 | Australia | Qualitative study with one-to-one structured interviews | Non-MAP: Interviews within 20-bed Gorman House in Sydney (residential unit with withdrawal management) | N/A |
| Hammond, K, Lynda G, Pauly, B | A cost–benefit analysis of a Canadian managed alcohol program | 2016 | Canada | Cost–benefit analysis with pre–post within-subject utilization comparison, and cost–benefit analysis with intervention (same as pre–post subjects) compared to control subjects | Kwae Kii Win Center in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada opened March 2012. 15-bed permanent supportive housing with communal living spaces. Residents have access to community worker (case manager), weekly NP visits, weekly Elder visits, community primary care, money mgmt, life skills training | 18 MAP participants; 20 Control; 1 program |
| Pauly, B; Gray, E; Perkin, K; Chow, C; Vallance, K; Krysowaty, B; Stockwell, T | Finding safety: a pilot study of managed alcohol program participants’ perceptions of housing and quality of life | 2016 | Canada | Pre–post longitudinal evaluation with comparison within subject and comparison with treatment-as-usual controls. In-depth interviews with MAP participants and staff | Kwae Kii Win Center in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada opened March 2012. 15-bed permanent supportive housing with communal living spaces. Residents have access to community worker (case manager), weekly NP visits, weekly Elder visits, community primary care, money mgmt, life skills training | 18 MAP participants; 20 Control; 1 program |
| Vallance, K.; Stockwell, T.; Pauly, B.; Chow, C.; Gray, E.; Krysowaty, B.; Perkin, K.; Zhao, J | Do managed alcohol programs change patterns of alcohol consumption and reduce related harm? A pilot study | 2016 | Canada | Pre–post longitudinal evaluation with comparison within subject and comparison with treatment-as-usual controls. In-depth interviews with MAP participants and staff | Kwae Kii Win Center in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada opened March 2012. 15-bed permanent supportive housing with communal living spaces. Residents have access to community worker (case manager), weekly NP visits, weekly Elder visits, community primary care, money mgmt, life skills training | 18 MAP participants; 20 Control; 1 program |
| Grazioli, V., Collins, S., Paroz, S., Graap, C., Daeppen, J | Six-month outcomes among socially marginalized alcohol and drug users attending a drop-in center allowing alcohol consumption | 2017 | Switzerland | Cross-sectional design, no comparison group | Drop-in center in French-speaking area of Switzerland open 12-7 pm created related to lack of daytime shelters and public intoxication by socially marginalized adults; no housing or shelter provided. Capacity 25 clients. Staffing with social workers, nurses, and psychologist. Access to hygiene facilities (shower, laundry, toilets), clothing, nonalcohol beverages, snacks (free) and lunch (small fee). Counseling also provided during alcohol dosing. Attendance by participants is recorded to an administrative database | 1 Day-Only MAP |
| Klingemann, J. & Klingemann, H | Drinking under control programs: perception of alcohol-related harm reduction measures in Poland. Results of a qualitative study among outpatient alcohol treatment providers | 2017 | Poland | Qualitative study with focus groups | N/A | N/A |
| Ramsperger, E. & Ramage, K | A selective literature review on managed alcohol programs and indigenous healing methodologies | 2017 | Canada | Evaluate feasibility and acceptability of MAP for Indigenous populations. Consultations/interviews. Conduct literature review of MAPs in Canada | Indigenous elders from Calgary and neighboring First Nation communities in Canada | N/A |
| Wettlaufer, A., Pauly, B., Brown, M., Chow, C., Vallance, K., Kauppi, C., Larocque, C., Stockwell, T., & Zhao, J | Toward alcohol harm reduction: results from an evaluation of a Canadian managed alcohol program | 2017 | Canada | Evaluation including monthly participant surveys x 6mos, and secondary data analysis, and in-depth interviews with select participants | Sudbury (Canada) Harm Reduction—Managed Alcohol Program. Day program only; no residential component | 8 MAP participants; 16 Controls; 8 MAP staff; 1 MAP program |
| Beausoleil RM, Hunt-Jinnouchi F, Onespot-Whitney J, Brown M, Owens T | Indigenous pathways to health and well-being: managed alcohol program (MAP) feasibility study | 2018 | Canada | Survey assessing feasibility and acceptability of a MAP. No comparison group | N/A | N/A |
| Chow, C.; Wettlaufer, A.; Zhao, J.; Stockwell, T.; Pauly, B. B.; Vallance, K | Counting the cold ones: a comparison of methods measuring total alcohol consumption of managed alcohol program participants | 2018 | Canada | Comparison sample cross-sectional design | 6 MAP programs: 2 in Ottawa, 1 each in Toronto, Hamilton, Thunder Bay and Vancouver. All have connection to housing with residential, transitional, or shelter-based models. Toronto: a 55-capacity shelter-based program for men upstairs from shelter for 543 homeless men. Ottawa: Features two programs for men and women: The Downtown MAP (12 beds) accepts new clients and assesses clients for a possible long-term stay at The Oaks facility (45 beds). Hamilton: A residential program for up to 22 men and women. Thunder Bay: A 15-bed residential facility for men and women. Vancouver: A 8-bed residential program for men and women | 65 MAP participants; 6 MAP programs N/A |
| Ezard, N.; Cecilio, M. E.; Clifford, B.; Baldry, E.; Burns, L.; Day, C. A.; Shanahan, M.; Dolan, K | A managed alcohol program in Sydney, Australia: Acceptability, cost-savings and non-beverage alcohol use | 2018 | Australia | Qualitative study with one-to-one structured interviews | N/A | |
| Stockwell, T.; Pauly, B. B.; Chow, C.; Erickson, R. A.; Krysowaty, B.; Roemer, A.; Vallance, K.; Wettlaufer, A.; Zhao, J | Does managing the consumption of people with severe alcohol dependence reduce harm? A comparison of participants in six Canadian managed alcohol programs with locally recruited controls | 2018 | Canada | Comparison sample, cross-sectional survey design using survey data from participants | 6 MAP programs: 2 in Ottawa, 1 each in Toronto, Hamilton, Thunder Bay and Vancouver. All have connection to housing with residential, transitional, or shelter-based models. Toronto: a 55-capacity shelter-based program for men upstairs from shelter for 543 homeless men. Ottawa: Features two programs for men and women: The Downtown MAP (12 beds) accepts new clients and assesses clients for a possible long-term stay at The Oaks facility (45 beds). Hamilton: A residential program for up to 22 men and women. Thunder Bay: A 15-bed residential facility for men and women. Vancouver: A 8-bed residential program for men and women | 175 MAP participants; 189 Control; 6 MAP programs 5 MAP programs |
| Hall, S | Clients perspectives of managed alcohol programs in the first 6 months and their relational shifts | 2019 | Canada | Secondary data analysis of qualitative interviews utilizing interpretive description informed by constructivism | Five MAPs with connection to housing with residential, transitional, or shelter-based models. Toronto, Seaton House: men's-only shelter-based program with up to 114 men enrolled in MAP out of 543 shelter-capacity. Ottawa: Features two programs for men and women: The Wet Program MAP (12 beds) accepts new clients and assesses clients for a possible long-term stay at The Oaks facility (45 beds). Hamilton: A residential program for up to 20–24 men and women. Thunder Bay, Kwae Kii Win: A 15-bed residential facility for men and women | |
| Hedland, K. (Thesis) | Community programming in mental healthcare planning: a case study at the drinkers lounge in Vancouver, BC (Thesis) | 2019 | Canada | Qualitative interviews with narrative research methodology informed by methods of research of Indigenous populations | The Drinker’s Lounge is a small drop-in center in the Downtown Eastside (DTES) of Vancouver, run under the non-profit harm reduction organization, PHS Community Services Society (PHS). Focus on community building. Open M-F, 10a-2p. Tuesdays host weekly ‘meeting of the drinkers’. To become member, person must attend three Tuesday meetings | 16 MAP participants; 2 MAP staff; 1 MAP program |
| Mattison CA, Belesiotis P, Wilson MG | Rapid synthesis determining the features of managed alcohol programs | 2019 | Canada | Literature review | Rapid synthesis of MAPs in Canada, including jurisdictional scan with findings detailing MAP staffing, operations, and funding | Basic details on 23 MAPs in Canada |
| Pauly, B; Brown, M.; Evans, J.; Gray, E.; Schiff, R.; Ivsins, A.; Krysowaty, B.; Vallance, K.; Stockwell, T | “There is a Place”: impacts of managed alcohol programs for people experiencing severe alcohol dependence and homelessness | 2019 | Canada | Multiple case study design utilizing situational analysis for 45–90-min semi-structured, in-depth interviews | 6 MAP programs: 2 in Ottawa, 1 each in Toronto, Hamilton, Thunder Bay and Vancouver. All have connection to housing with residential, transitional, or shelter-based models. Toronto: a 55-capacity shelter-based program for men upstairs from shelter for 543 homeless men. Ottawa: Features two programs for men and women: The Downtown MAP (12 beds) accepts new clients and assesses clients for a possible long-term stay at The Oaks facility (45 beds). Hamilton: A residential program for up to 22 men and women. Thunder Bay: A 15-bed residential facility for men and women. Vancouver: A 8-bed residential program for men and women | 57 current and former MAP participants; 50 MAP staff; 5 MAP programs N/A |
| Parkes, T.; Carver, H.; Matheson C.; Pauly, B.; Browne, T | Scoping the feasibility and acceptability of managed alcohol programs for people who are homeless with severe alcohol problems in community-based, third sector services in Scotland. Research briefing | 2020 | UK (Scotland) | Quantitative: case record reviews of those accessing third sector (civil society/not for profit) homelessness services who would meet the criteria for MAPs. Qualitative: semi-structured interviews (purposive sampling) | N/A | |
| Pauly, B; King, V.; Smith, A.; Tranquilli-Doherty, S.; Wishart, M.; Vallance, K.; Stockwell, T.; Sutherland, C | Breaking the cycle of survival drinking: insights from a non-residential, peer-initiated and peer-run managed alcohol program | 2020 | Canada | Semi-structured in-depth interviews with SEMAP participants recruited through purposive sampling | Vancouver-based Street Entrenched Managed Alcohol Program was operating as a non-residential community MAP and was entirely peer-developed and peer-led. The harm reduction goals for the MAP as identified by the peers were to help prevent withdrawal symptoms, improve daily functioning, and consume sufficient levels of alcohol to preclude the need for NBA. Specific goals included reduction in NBA use, and reduction in alcohol-related deaths | 14 MAP participants; 1 MAP program |
| Carver, H., Parkes, T., Browne, T., Matheson, C., & Pauly, B | Investigating the need for alcohol harm reduction and managed alcohol programs for people experiencing homelessness and alcohol use disorders in Scotland | 2021 | UK (Scotland) | Quantitative: case record reviews of those accessing third sector (civil society/not for profit) homelessness services who would meet the criteria for MAPs. Qualitative: semi-structured interviews (purposive sampling) | N/A | N/A |
| T. Stockwell, T., Zhao, J., Pauly, B., Chow, C., Vallance, K., Wettlaufer, C., Saunders, J.B., & Chick, J | Trajectories of alcohol use and related harms for managed alcohol program participants over 12 months compared with local controls: a quasi-experimental study | 2021 | Canada | Quasi-experimental study within systematic longitudinal study with in-depth interviews of MAP participants (at 0–2, 6 and 12 months from admission) and of locally recruited controls | The six MAP programs included one site each in Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton, Thunder Bay, Sudbury, and Vancouver. More detailed descriptions are provided in Pauly et al. (2018) | 59 MAP participants;116 Controls; 6 MAP programs |
| Kidd, S. A.; Kirkpatrick, H.; George, L | Getting to know Mark, a homeless alcohol dependent artist, as he finds his way out of the river | 2011 | Canada | Longitudinal single participant examination with interviews and chart review | 20 bed MAP in Canadian urban center. Provides shelter, meals, treatment of medical and psychiatric conditions | 1 MAP program participant |
| Pauly, B; Vallance, K; Wettlaufer, A; Chow, C; Brown, R; Evans, J; Gray, E; Krysowaty, B; Ivsins, A; Schiff, R; Stockwell, T | Community managed alcohol programs in Canada: overview of key dimensions and implementation | 2018 | Canada | Case study methodology with interviews, inductive content analysis | Study involves 13 community-based MAPs in 7 cities throughout Canada. The sites are not specifically named in the study. Programs included if: 1. An aim of program was to reduce harms; 2. There was daily alcohol dispensing for clients; and, 3. Alcohol was provided as part of the program. Excluded if: located in long-term care or hospital; tolerated alcohol use without any management of consumption, such as wet shelter | 13 MAP programs |
| Erickson, R. A.; Stockwell, T.; Pauly, B. B.; Chow, C.; Roemer, A.; Zhao, J.; Vallance, K.; Wettlaufer, A | How do people with homelessness and alcohol dependence cope when alcohol is unaffordable? A comparison of residents of Canadian managed alcohol programs and locally recruited controls | 2018 | Canada | Cross-sectional comparisons of data on self-reported coping strategies collected from interviews | 6 MAP programs: 2 in Ottawa, 1 each in Toronto, Hamilton, Thunder Bay and Vancouver. All have connection to housing with residential, transitional, or shelter-based models. Toronto: a 55-capacity shelter-based program for men upstairs from shelter for 543 homeless men. Ottawa: Features two programs for men and women: The Downtown MAP (12 beds) accepts new clients and assesses clients for a possible long-term stay at The Oaks facility (45 beds). Hamilton: A residential program for up to 22 men and women. Thunder Bay: A 15-bed residential facility for men and women. Vancouver: A 8-bed residential program for men and women | 175 MAP participants; 189 Control; 6 MAP programs |
| Ristau, J.,Mehtani, N., Gomez, S., Nance, M., Keller, D., Surlyn, C., Eveland, J. & Smith-Bernardin, S | Successful implementation of managed alcohol programs in the San Francisco Bay Area during the COVID-19 crisis | 2021 | USA | Descriptive | San Francisco and Alameda Counties, California. I&Q: total 3 sites initially, to 7 total. Bed capacity 60–120 per site. Short-term up to ~ 16 days. Respite: 1 site. 75beds. I&Q staffing by disaster services workers: medical providers (MDs, NPs, PharmDs), public health nurses, behavioral health clinicians, and nonclinical support staff (including healthcare workers, clerical support workers, and shelter staff). At SF Respite SIP setting, staffing remained the same prior to COVID-19 and the implementation of the MAP pilot | 21 MAP participants; 3 MAP sites |
| Muckle, J.; Muckle, W.; Turnbull, J | COMMENTARY: Operating principles from Ottawa’s managed alcohol program | 2018 | Canada | Descriptive | Downtown MAP & The Oaks (Ottawa Canada) operating since 2001. The 28 bed Downtown MAP transitional program operates as a starter site, focusing on stabilizing alcohol consumption, behavioral management, addressing care needs, and providing service linkages. The Oaks 55-bed program offers permanent housing, emphasizing life skill development, social connections, and is viewed as a graduate program of Downtown MAP for stabilized residents. Staffing includes client care workers, peer workers, nurses, physicians, and peer leaders (specifically at The Oaks) | 1 MAP program |
| Stockwell, T. & Pauly, B | Managed alcohol programs: Is it time for a more radical approach to reduce harms for people experiencing homelessness and alcohol use disorders? | 2018 | Canada | Editorial | Editorial introduction to collection of studies of managed alcohol programs. Authors provide both benefits and risks of MAP related to alcohol harms, and insight to common concerns raised by reviewers and commentators responding to MAP research | N/A |
Quantitative outcomes on alcohol consumption, health outcomes, housing retention, and service utilization
| Author, Year | Title | Location or country | Type of intervention | Sample size | Alcohol consumption | Health outcomes (acute and chronic) | Housing retention | Utilization of services | Other outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Podymow, T.; Turnbull, J.; Coyle, D.; Yetisir, E.; Wells, G. (2006) | Shelter-based managed alcohol administration to chronically homeless people addicted to alcohol | Canada | Pre–post within subject | 17 participants; 1 program | + | ⟷ | + | + | +Hygiene, nutrition + medication compliance |
| Stockwell, T; Pauly, B; Chow, C; Vallance, K; Perkin, K (2013) | Evaluation of a managed alcohol program in Vancouver, BC Early findings and reflections on alcohol harm reduction | Canada | Mixed-methods pilot study with pre–post comparison within subject | 7 participants; 1 program | ⟷ Beverage alcohol + NBA | ⟷ Alcohol-related harms − Self-rated physical health − LFTs | + | ⟷ | + Feasibility/acceptability |
| Evans, J.; Semogas, D.; Smalley, J. G.; Lohfeld, L. (2015) | “This place has given me a reason to care”: Understanding “managed alcohol programs” as enabling places in Canada | Canada | Qualitative study with interviews and focus groups | 10 participants; 1 program | + | NR | + | NR | + Interpersonal connections + Attention to physical health + Sense of self management, control of alcohol consumption |
| Hammond, K, Lynda G, Pauly, B (2016) | A cost–benefit analysis of a Canadian managed alcohol program | Canada | Cost–benefit analysis with pre–post within-subject utilization comparison, and cost–benefit analysis with intervention (same as pre–post subjects) compared to control subjects | 18 MAP participants; 20 Control; 1 program | NR | NR | NR | + | + Cost–benefit |
| Pauly, B; Gray, E; Perkin, K; Chow, C; Vallance, K; Krysowaty, B; Stockwell, T (2016) | Finding safety: a pilot study of managed alcohol program participants’ perceptions of housing and quality of life | Canada | Mixed-methods longitudinal pilot study with pre–post comparison within subject, and comparison with treatment-as-usual controls. In-depth interviews with MAP participants and staff | 18 MAP participants; 20 Control; 1 program. Note 7 interviewees total for qualitative interviews | NR | NR | + | NR | + Feasibility/Acceptability |
| Vallance, K.; Stockwell, T.; Pauly, B.; Chow, C.; Gray, E.; Krysowaty, B.; Perkin, K.; Zhao, J. (2016) | Do managed alcohol programs change patterns of alcohol consumption and reduce related harm? A pilot study | Canada | Mixed-methods longitudinal pilot study with pre–post comparison within subject, and comparison with treatment-as-usual controls. In-depth interviews with MAP participants and staff | 18 MAP participants; 20 Control; 1 program | ⟷ Beverage alcohol + NBA | + | NR | + | |
| Erickson, R. A.; Stockwell, T.; Pauly, B. B.; Chow, C.; Roemer, A.; Zhao, J.; Vallance, K.; Wettlaufer, A. (2018) | How do people with homelessness and alcohol dependence cope when alcohol is unaffordable? A comparison of residents of Canadian managed alcohol programs and locally recruited controls | Canada | Cross-sectional comparisons of data on self-reported coping strategies collected from interviews | 175 MAP participants; 189 Control; 6 MAP programs | ⟷ Beverage alcohol + NBA | NR | NR | NR | + Coping strategies when alcohol is unaffordable |
| Stockwell, T.; Pauly, B. B.; Chow, C.; Erickson, R. A.; Krysowaty, B.; Roemer, A.; Vallance, K.; Wettlaufer, A.; Zhao, J. (2018) | Does managing the consumption of people with severe alcohol dependence reduce harm? A comparison of participants in six Canadian managed alcohol programs with locally recruited controls | Canada | Comparison sample, cross-sectional survey design using survey data from participants of 6 residential MAPs in 5 cities | 175 MAP participants; 189 Control; 6 MAP programs | ⟷ Beverage alcohol + NBA **only longer-term MAPs | + Acute | NR | NR | |
| Evans, J. (2012) | Supportive measures, enabling restraint: governing homeless “street drinkers” in Hamilton, Canada | Canada | In-depth interviews, observation of program operations, and document review | 24 MAP participants; 2 MAP staff; 1 MAP program | NR | + | + | NR | + Relationship to alcohol |
| Wettlaufer, A., Pauly, B., Brown, M., Chow, C., Vallance, K., Kauppi, C., Larocque, C., Stockwell, T., & Zhao, J. (2017) | Toward alcohol harm reduction: results from an evaluation of a Canadian managed alcohol program | Canada | Small-scale mixed-methods evaluation | One MAP site. 8 MAP participants; 16 Controls; 8 MAP staff | + Beverage alcohol − NBA | – | NR | NR | − Safety (within MAP) + Well-being |
| Stockwell, T., Zhao, J. Pauly, B., Chow, C., Vallance, K. Wettlaufer, A., Saunders, J.B., and Chick, J. (2021) | Trajectories of Alcohol Use and Related Harms for Managed Alcohol Program Participants over 12 months compared with local controls: a quasi-experimental study | Canada | Mixed-methods longitudinal pilot study with pre–post comparison within subject, and comparison with treatment-as-usual controls | MAP participants | + Beverage alcohol + NBA | ⟷ Alcohol-related harms ⟷ LFTs | NR | NR | More stringent rules for outside drinking = + outcomes for MAP participants Less stringent rules for outside drinking = MAP participants similar to controls for consumption, harms |
| Pauly, B; King, V.; Smith, A.; Tranquilli-Doherty, S.; Wishart, M.; Vallance, K.; Stockwell, T.; Sutherland, C. (2020) | Breaking the cycle of survival drinking: insights from a non-residential, peer-initiated and peer-run managed alcohol program | Canada | Qualitative–semi-structured in-depth interviews with SEMAP participants recruited through purposive sampling | + NBA | + Alcohol-related harms | NR | NR |
+ Significantly greater/improved in the intervention group (or post-intervention) = in favor of the intervention
↔No significant difference in pre- and post-intervention
−No statistical significance reported
?Significantly poorer in the intervention group (or post-intervention) = not in favor of the intervention
NR outcome not reported
| SECTION | ITEM | PRISMA-ScR CHECKLIST ITEM | REPORTED ON PAGE # |
|---|---|---|---|
| TITLE | |||
| Title | 1 | Identify the report as a scoping review | 1 |
| ABSTRACT | |||
| Structured summary | 2 | Provide a structured summary that includes (as applicable): background, objectives, eligibility criteria, sources of evidence, charting methods, results, and conclusions that relate to the review questions and objectives | 1–2 |
| INTRODUCTION | |||
| Rationale | 3 | Describe the rationale for the review in the context of what is already known. Explain why the review questions/objectives lend themselves to a scoping review approach | 1 |
| Objectives | 4 | Provide an explicit statement of the questions and objectives being addressed with reference to their key elements (e.g., population or participants, concepts, and context) or other relevant key elements used to conceptualize the review questions and/or objectives | 1 |
| METHODS | |||
| Protocol and registration | 5 | Indicate whether a review protocol exists; state if and where it can be accessed (e.g., a Web address); and if available, provide registration information, including the registration number | n/a |
| Eligibility criteria | 6 | Specify characteristics of the sources of evidence used as eligibility criteria (e.g., years considered, language, and publication status), and provide a rationale | Page 2 |
| Information sources* | 7 | Describe all information sources in the search (e.g., databases with dates of coverage and contact with authors to identify additional sources), as well as the date the most recent search was executed | Page 1, Appendix 3 |
| Search | 8 | Present the full electronic search strategy for at least 1 database, including any limits used, such that it could be repeated | Appendix 3 |
| Selection of sources of evidence† | 9 | State the process for selecting sources of evidence (e.g., screening and eligibility) included in the scoping review | 1,2 |
| Data charting process‡ | 10 | Describe the methods of charting data from the included sources of evidence (e.g., calibrated forms or forms that have been tested by the team before their use, and whether data charting was done independently or in duplicate) and any processes for obtaining and confirming data from investigators | 2 |
| Data items | 11 | List and define all variables for which data were sought and any assumptions and simplifications made | 2 |
| Critical appraisal of individual sources of evidence§ | 12 | If done, provide a rationale for conducting a critical appraisal of included sources of evidence; describe the methods used and how this information was used in any data synthesis (if appropriate) | n/a |
| Synthesis of results | 13 | Describe the methods of handling and summarizing the data that were charted | 2 |
| RESULTS | |||
| Selection of sources of evidence | 14 | Give numbers of sources of evidence screened, assessed for eligibility, and included in the review, with reasons for exclusions at each stage, ideally using a flow diagram | Figure |
| Characteristics of sources of evidence | 15 | For each source of evidence, present characteristics for which data were charted and provide the citations | Tables |
| Critical appraisal within sources of evidence | 16 | If done, present data on critical appraisal of included sources of evidence (see item 12) | n/a |
| Results of individual sources of evidence | 17 | For each included source of evidence, present the relevant data that were charted that relate to the review questions and objectives | Tables |
| Synthesis of results | 18 | Summarize and/or present the charting results as they relate to the review questions and objectives | Pages 2–6, Tables |
| DISCUSSION | |||
| Summary of evidence | 19 | Summarize the main results (including an overview of concepts, themes, and types of evidence available), link to the review questions and objectives, and consider the relevance to key groups | 6–8 |
| Limitations | 20 | Discuss the limitations of the scoping review process | 8 |
| Conclusions | 21 | Provide a general interpretation of the results with respect to the review questions and objectives, as well as potential implications and/or next steps | 8 |
| FUNDING | |||
| Funding | 22 | Describe sources of funding for the included sources of evidence, as well as sources of funding for the scoping review. Describe the role of the funders of the scoping review | 1 |
From: Tricco AC, Lillie E, Zarin W, O'Brien KK, Colquhoun H, Levac D, et al. PRISMA Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR): Checklist and Explanation. Ann Intern Med.;169:467–473. https://doi.org/10.7326/M18-0850
JBI Joanna Briggs Institute, PRISMA-ScR preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses extension for scoping reviews
*Where sources of evidence (see second footnote) are compiled from, such as bibliographic databases, social media platforms, and Web sites
†A more inclusive/heterogeneous term used to account for the different types of evidence or data sources (e.g., quantitative and/or qualitative research, expert opinion, and policy documents) that may be eligible in a scoping review as opposed to only studies. This is not to be confused with information sources (see first footnote)
‡The frameworks by Arksey and O’Malley (6) and Levac and colleagues (7) and the JBI guidance (4, 5) refer to the process of data extraction in a scoping review as data charting
§The process of systematically examining research evidence to assess its validity, results, and relevance before using it to inform a decision. This term is used for items 12 and 19 instead of "risk of bias" (which is more applicable to systematic reviews of interventions) to include and acknowledge the various sources of evidence that may be used in a scoping review (e.g., quantitative and/or qualitative research, expert opinion, and policy document)
| Section/topic | # | Checklist item | Location(s) reported |
|---|---|---|---|
| INFORMATION SOURCES AND METHODS | |||
| Database name | 1 | Name each individual database searched, stating the platform for each | p 1, Appendix 3 |
| Multi-database searching | 2 | If databases were searched simultaneously on a single platform, state the name of the platform, listing all of the databases searched | n/a |
| Study registries | 3 | List any study registries searched | n/a |
| Online resources and browsing | 4 | Describe any online or print source purposefully searched or browsed (e.g., tables of contents, print conference proceedings, web sites), and how this was done | n/a |
| Citation searching | 5 | Indicate whether cited references or citing references were examined, and describe any methods used for locating cited/citing references (e.g., browsing reference lists, using a citation index, setting up email alerts for references citing included studies) | 2 |
| Contacts | 6 | Indicate whether additional studies or data were sought by contacting authors, experts, manufacturers, or others | 2 |
| Other methods | 7 | Describe any additional information sources or search methods used | 2 |
| SEARCH STRATEGIES | |||
| Full search strategies | 8 | Include the search strategies for each database and information source, copied and pasted exactly as run | Appendix 3 |
| Limits and restrictions | 9 | Specify that no limits were used, or describe any limits or restrictions applied to a search (e.g., date or time period, language, study design) and provide justification for their use | p 1, Appendix 3 |
| Search filters | 10 | Indicate whether published search filters were used (as originally designed or modified), and if so, cite the filter(s) used | n/a |
| Prior work | 11 | Indicate when search strategies from other literature reviews were adapted or reused for a substantive part or all of the search, citing the previous review(s) | n/a |
| Updates | 12 | Report the methods used to update the search(es) (e.g., rerunning searches, email alerts) | p 1, Appendix 3 |
| Dates of searches | 13 | For each search strategy, provide the date when the last search occurred | p 1, Appendix 3 |
| PEER REVIEW | |||
| Peer review | 14 | Describe any search peer review process | n/a |
| MANAGING RECORDS | |||
| Total Records | 15 | Document the total number of records identified from each database and other information sources | Appendix 3, Fig. |
| Deduplication | 16 | Describe the processes and any software used to deduplicate records from multiple database searches and other information sources | Appendix 3 |
| PRISMA-S: an extension to the PRISMA statement for reporting literature searches in systematic reviews | |||
| Rethlefsen ML, Kirtley S, Waffenschmidt S, Ayala AP, Moher D, Page MJ, Koffel JB, PRISMA-S Group | |||
| Last updated February 27, 2020 | |||
| Database | Search strategy | Number of results |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed (1966-) | "managed alcohol"[tiab] OR "surrogate alcohol"[tiab] | 57 |
| Embase (1947-) | "managed alcohol" OR "wet shelter" OR "wet shelters" OR ('controlled alcohol' AND program*) OR "surrogate alcohol" | 79 |
| CINAHL Complete (EBSCO, 1937-) | "managed alcohol" OR "surrogate alcohol" OR "controlled alcohol" | 56 |
| PsycINFO (ProQuest, 1887-) | "managed alcohol" OR "wet housing" OR "wet shelter" OR "wet shelters" OR "controlled alcohol" | 65 |
| Sociological Abstracts & Social Services Abstracts (searched together via ProQuest: 1963-) | "managed alcohol" OR "wet housing" OR "wet shelter" OR "wet shelters" OR "controlled alcohol" | 15 |
| Google Scholar | "wet housing" OR "wet shelter" OR "wet shelters" OR "managed alcohol" OR ("alcohol management" AND housing) OR "controlled alcohol" OR "surrogate alcohol" | 150 |
| Total number of results | 422 | |
| Total number of duplicates | 143 | |
| Total number after de-duplication | 279 |