Can screening and brief intervention lead to population-level reductions in alcohol-related harm?

被引:0
|
作者
Nick Heather
机构
[1] Northumbria University,Emeritus Professor of Alcohol & Other Drug Studies
关键词
Public Health Benefit; Occupational Health Care; Cirrhosis Mortality; National Screen Committee; Brief Intervention;
D O I
10.1186/1940-0640-7-15
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A distinction is made between the clinical and public health justifications for screening and brief intervention (SBI) against hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption. Early claims for a public health benefit of SBI derived from research on general medical practitioners’ (GPs’) advice on smoking cessation, but these claims have not been realized, mainly because GPs have not incorporated SBI into their routine practice. A recent modeling exercise estimated that, if all GPs in England screened every patient at their next consultation, 96% of the general population would be screened over 10 years, with 70-79% of excessive drinkers receiving brief interventions (BI); assuming a 10% success rate, this would probably amount to a population-level effect of SBI. Thus, a public health benefit for SBI presupposes widespread screening; but recent government policy in England favors targeted versus universal screening, and in Scotland screening is based on new registrations and clinical presentation. A recent proposal for a national screening program was rejected by the UK National Health Service’s National Screening Committee because 1) there was no good evidence that SBI led to reductions in mortality or morbidity, and 2) a safe, simple, precise, and validated screening test was not available. Even in countries like Sweden and Finland, where expensive national programs to disseminate SBI have been implemented, only a minority of the population has been asked about drinking during health-care visits, and a minority of excessive drinkers has been advised to cut down. Although there has been research on the relationship between treatment for alcohol problems and population-level effects, there has been no such research for SBI, nor have there been experimental investigations of its relationship with population-level measures of alcohol-related harm. These are strongly recommended. In this article, conditions that would allow a population-level effect of SBI to occur are reviewed, including their political acceptability. It is tentatively concluded that widespread dissemination of SBI, without the implementation of alcohol control measures, might have indirect influences on levels of consumption and harm but would be unlikely on its own to result in public health benefits. However, if and when alcohol control measures were introduced, SBI would still have an important role in the battle against alcohol-related harm.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Can screening and brief intervention lead to population-level reductions in alcohol-related harm ?
    Heather, Nick
    [J]. ADDICTION SCIENCE & CLINICAL PRACTICE, 2012, 7
  • [2] Population-level interventions to reduce alcohol-related harm: An overview of systematic reviews
    Martineau, Fred
    Tyner, Elizabeth
    Lorenc, Theo
    Petticrew, Mark
    Lock, Karen
    [J]. PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, 2013, 57 (04) : 278 - 296
  • [3] Screening and brief intervention delivery in the workplace to reduce alcohol-related harm: A pilot randomized controlled trial
    Watson, Hazel
    Godfrey, Christine
    McFadyen, Angus
    McArthur, Katherine
    Stevenson, Marisa
    Holloway, Aisha
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES, 2015, 52 (01) : 39 - 48
  • [4] EFFECTS OF A BRIEF INTERPERSONAL CONFLICT-RELATED COGNITIVE REAPPRAISAL INTERVENTION IN REDUCTIONS IN ALCOHOL-RELATED PROBLEMS
    Rodriguez, L. M.
    Dell, J. B.
    Lee, K. D.
    Onufrak, J.
    [J]. ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 2019, 43 : 127A - 127A
  • [5] Brief intervention after alcohol-related injuries
    Dyehouse, JM
    Sommers, MS
    [J]. NURSING CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 1998, 33 (01) : 93 - +
  • [6] Brief intervention treatment for alcohol-related offenders
    Buchanan, Julian
    [J]. PROBATION JOURNAL, 2005, 52 (02) : 187 - +
  • [7] A population-level metric for gambling-related harm
    Browne, Matthew
    Greer, Nancy
    Rawat, Vijay
    Rockloff, Matthew
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL GAMBLING STUDIES, 2017, 17 (02) : 163 - 175
  • [8] HOW DO COMMUNITIES ACHIEVE REDUCTIONS IN ALCOHOL-RELATED AND DRUG-RELATED HARM
    WODAK, A
    [J]. ADDICTION, 1994, 89 (02) : 147 - 150
  • [9] ALCOHOL-RELATED SEXUAL CONSEQUENCES AMONG STUDENTS IN BRIEF ALCOHOL INTERVENTION
    Orchowski, L. M.
    Mastroleo, N. R.
    Borsari, B.
    Peterson, C.
    [J]. ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 2011, 35 (06) : 153A - 153A
  • [10] Population-Level Quality Measures for Behavioral Screening and Intervention
    Brown, Richard L.
    Smith, Mindy A.
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL QUALITY, 2016, 31 (04) : 323 - 330