Effectiveness of a Specialized Brief Intervention for At‐risk Drinkers in an Emergency Department: Short‐term Results of a Randomized Controlled Trial — Pol Bruguera (2018) | RDL Network
Effectiveness of a Specialized Brief Intervention for At‐risk Drinkers in an Emergency Department: Short‐term Results of a Randomized Controlled Trial
Article 2018 en
Authors
PB
Pol Bruguera
PB
Pablo Barrio
CO
Clara Oliveras
Abstract
1 min read
Of 3,027 patients presenting to the ED, 2,044 (67%) were potentially eligible to participate, 247 (12%) screened positive for at-risk drinking, and 200 agreed to participate. Seventy-two percent of the participating sample were men, and the mean (±SD) age was 43 (±16.7) years. Follow-up rates were 76.5%. At 1.5 months, the intervention group showed greater reductions in alcohol consumption and fewer patients continuing with at-risk alcohol use (27.8% vs. 48.1%; p = 0.01). The SBIRT program also increased the probability of attending specialized treatment, compared to the control condition (23% vs. 9.8%, p = 0.0119) CONCLUSION: The SBIRT program in the ED was found to be feasible and effective in identifying at-risk drinkers, reducing at-risk alcohol use, and increasing treatment for alcohol problems.
Pol Bruguera, Pablo Barrio, Jakob Manthey, Clara Oliveras, Hugo López‐Pelayo, Laura Nuño, Laia Miquel, Ana López-Lazcano, Chrysanthi Blithikioti, Elsa Caballería, Silvia Matrai, Jürgen Rehm, Eduard Vieta, Antoni Gual
Ambrose H. Wong, Bidisha Nath, Dhruvil Shah, Anusha Kumar, Morgan Brinker, Isaac V. Faustino, Michael Boyce, James Dziura, Rebekah Heckmann, Kimberly A. Yonkers, Steven L. Bernstein, Karthik Adapa, Richard A. Taylor, Polina Ovchinnikova, Terika McCall, Edward R. Melnick
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.