Division of General Internal Medicine, Health Services Research, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90024, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2010 Dec;58(12):2369-74. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2010.03176.x. Epub 2010 Nov 18.
To identify predictors of alcohol-related patient-physician discussions.
Cross-sectional study using baseline data from a randomized controlled trial.
Community-based group practice.
Thirty-one physicians in Project Senior Health and Alcohol Risk Education and 3,305 of their patients aged 60 and older who use alcohol and completed a survey that included the Comorbidity Alcohol Risk Evaluation Tool (CARET).
At study baseline, older adults were asked whether alcohol-related discussions with a physician had occurred in the prior year. This outcome was modeled using logistic regression models with physician random effects. Predictor variables included patient-level variables such as demographics and seven CARET-defined risk factors, specifically a medical or psychiatric comorbidity that alcohol might worsen, a potentially alcohol-related symptom, use of a medication that may interact negatively with alcohol, excessive quantity or frequency of alcohol use, binge drinking, concern from others about drinking, and drinking and driving. Physician-level predictors (age, sex, years since graduation, specialty) were also included.
The probability of reporting alcohol-related discussions declined with patient age (e.g., odds ratio (OR)=0.40 for patients aged ≥80) and was significantly lower for Latinos (OR=0.38). Drinking and driving (OR=1.69) or concern from others (OR=6.04) were significantly associated with alcohol-related discussions; having comorbidities or using medications that may interact with alcohol were not.
Although patient demographics, including age and ethnicity, are associated with the occurrence of alcohol-related discussions, clinical factors that may negatively interact with alcohol to increase risk are not. This suggests that physicians may not be attuned to the entire spectrum of alcohol-related risks for older adults.
确定与酒精相关的医患讨论的预测因素。
使用随机对照试验的基线数据进行的横断面研究。
基于社区的小组实践。
31 名参与 Project Senior Health and Alcohol Risk Education 的医生和 3305 名年龄在 60 岁及以上、饮酒并完成了包括 Comorbidity Alcohol Risk Evaluation Tool(CARET)在内的调查的患者。
在研究基线时,老年人被问及在过去一年中是否与医生进行过与酒精相关的讨论。使用包含医师随机效应的逻辑回归模型对该结果进行建模。预测变量包括患者层面的变量,如人口统计学特征和 CARET 定义的七个风险因素,特别是可能使酒精恶化的医疗或精神合并症、可能与酒精相关的症状、使用可能与酒精产生负面相互作用的药物、饮酒量或频率过多、狂饮、他人对饮酒的担忧以及酒后驾车。还包括医师层面的预测因素(年龄、性别、毕业年限、专业)。
报告与酒精相关讨论的概率随患者年龄的增加而降低(例如,年龄≥80 岁的患者的比值比(OR)为 0.40),拉丁裔患者显著降低(OR 为 0.38)。酒后驾车(OR=1.69)或他人的担忧(OR=6.04)与与酒精相关的讨论显著相关;患有合并症或使用可能与酒精相互作用的药物与酒精相关讨论无关。
尽管患者的人口统计学特征,包括年龄和种族,与与酒精相关的讨论的发生有关,但可能与酒精产生负面影响以增加风险的临床因素无关。这表明医生可能无法了解老年人与酒精相关的所有风险。