Effectiveness of alcohol brief intervention in a general hospital: a randomized controlled trial
Effectiveness of alcohol brief intervention in a general hospital: a randomized controlled trial
Objective: The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of an alcohol brief intervention (ABI) on alcohol consumption in hazardous or harmful drinkers compared with screening alone within a general hospital setting.
Method: Following screening, 124 hazardous or harmful drinkers (103 men, ages 18–80 years, score of 3–12 on the Fast Alcohol Screening Test [FAST]) admitted to medical and orthopedic wards during the 13-month recruitment period were randomized to receive an ABI or control. The intervention group received an ABI where they were supported to set their own personalized alcohol reduction goals, and both groups received a health information leaflet. Retrospective alcohol consumption for 7 days was reported for the week, before hospital admission and 6 months after it.
Results: Demographics and clinical characteristics at baseline showed no statistical differences between the two groups on all variables except FAST score, which was higher in the intervention group (p ? .05). A reduction of 85 grams of alcohol per week (95% CI [162.46, 7.54]) was observed between groups in favor of the intervention group based on changes from baseline. However, there was no significant difference between groups for absolute grams of alcohol per week at 6 months. A significant mean difference in favor of the intervention group (U = 1,537, p = .043) was observed for weekly heavy drinking episodes.
Conclusions: Our results suggest screening with delivery of ABI for harmful/hazardous drinkers in a general hospital is beneficial in reducing alcohol consumption compared with screening alone.
838-844
Mcqueen, Jean M.
53b13db8-bb97-48f5-8ab5-222ab89eae3d
Howe, Tracey E.
e2f9e1bd-54a5-4f18-8f97-4bc7fed0ad11
Ballinger, Claire
1495742c-90aa-4074-920e-95e6cc3d5380
Godwin, Jon
2d82f518-2711-488e-8029-e40d0b26317b
18 November 2015
Mcqueen, Jean M.
53b13db8-bb97-48f5-8ab5-222ab89eae3d
Howe, Tracey E.
e2f9e1bd-54a5-4f18-8f97-4bc7fed0ad11
Ballinger, Claire
1495742c-90aa-4074-920e-95e6cc3d5380
Godwin, Jon
2d82f518-2711-488e-8029-e40d0b26317b
Mcqueen, Jean M., Howe, Tracey E., Ballinger, Claire and Godwin, Jon
(2015)
Effectiveness of alcohol brief intervention in a general hospital: a randomized controlled trial.
Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 76 (6), .
(doi:10.15288/jsad.2015.76.838).
(PMID:26562591)
Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of an alcohol brief intervention (ABI) on alcohol consumption in hazardous or harmful drinkers compared with screening alone within a general hospital setting.
Method: Following screening, 124 hazardous or harmful drinkers (103 men, ages 18–80 years, score of 3–12 on the Fast Alcohol Screening Test [FAST]) admitted to medical and orthopedic wards during the 13-month recruitment period were randomized to receive an ABI or control. The intervention group received an ABI where they were supported to set their own personalized alcohol reduction goals, and both groups received a health information leaflet. Retrospective alcohol consumption for 7 days was reported for the week, before hospital admission and 6 months after it.
Results: Demographics and clinical characteristics at baseline showed no statistical differences between the two groups on all variables except FAST score, which was higher in the intervention group (p ? .05). A reduction of 85 grams of alcohol per week (95% CI [162.46, 7.54]) was observed between groups in favor of the intervention group based on changes from baseline. However, there was no significant difference between groups for absolute grams of alcohol per week at 6 months. A significant mean difference in favor of the intervention group (U = 1,537, p = .043) was observed for weekly heavy drinking episodes.
Conclusions: Our results suggest screening with delivery of ABI for harmful/hazardous drinkers in a general hospital is beneficial in reducing alcohol consumption compared with screening alone.
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Accepted/In Press date: 23 July 2015
Published date: 18 November 2015
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 386919
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/386919
ISSN: 1937-1888
PURE UUID: 249677c9-2273-482f-8854-94dd6ede28e5
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Date deposited: 23 Mar 2016 08:55
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 22:39
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Contributors
Author:
Jean M. Mcqueen
Author:
Tracey E. Howe
Author:
Claire Ballinger
Author:
Jon Godwin
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