Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Center for Healthcare Improvement for Addictions, Mental Illness and Medically Vulnerable Populations (CHAMMP), University of Washington at Harborview Medical Center, Seattle, WA, USA.
Addict Sci Clin Pract. 2012 Oct 30;7(1):24. doi: 10.1186/1940-0640-7-24.
Although brief intervention (BI) for alcohol and other drug problems has been associated with subsequent decreased levels of self-reported substance use, there is little information in the extant literature as to whether individuals with co-occurring hazardous substance use and mental illness would benefit from BI to the same extent as those without mental illness. This is an important question, as mental illness is estimated to co-occur in 37% of individuals with an alcohol use disorder and in more than 50% of individuals with a drug use disorder. The goal of this study was to explore differences in self-reported alcohol and/or drug use in patients with and without mental illness diagnoses six months after receiving BI in a hospital emergency department (ED).
This study took advantage of a naturalistic situation where a screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) program had been implemented in nine large EDs in the US state of Washington as part of a national SBIRT initiative. A subset of patients who received BI was interviewed six months later about current alcohol and drug use. Linear regression was used to assess whether change in substance use measures differed among patients with a mental illness diagnosis compared with those without. Data were analyzed for both a statewide (n = 828) and single-hospital (n = 536) sample.
No significant differences were found between mentally ill and non-mentally ill subgroups in either sample with regard to self-reported hazardous substance use at six-month follow-up.
These results suggest that BI may not have a differing impact based on the presence of a mental illness diagnosis. Given the high prevalence of mental illness among individuals with alcohol and other drug problems, this finding may have important public health implications.
尽管简短干预(BI)在治疗酒精和其他药物问题方面取得了一定的效果,可以降低自我报告的物质使用水平,但关于同时患有物质使用障碍和精神疾病的个体是否会像没有精神疾病的个体一样从 BI 中受益,现有文献中的信息却很少。这是一个重要的问题,因为据估计,37%的酒精使用障碍患者和超过 50%的药物使用障碍患者同时患有精神疾病。本研究的目的是探讨在医院急诊部(ED)接受 BI 治疗六个月后,患有和不患有精神疾病诊断的患者在自我报告的酒精和/或药物使用方面的差异。
本研究利用了一种自然情况,即在全美范围内的 SBIRT 倡议中,在华盛顿州的九个大型 ED 实施了一种筛查、简短干预和转介治疗(SBIRT)计划。在六个月后,对接受 BI 的患者进行了关于当前酒精和药物使用情况的访谈。线性回归用于评估与没有精神疾病诊断的患者相比,物质使用措施的变化是否存在差异。对全州(n=828)和单个医院(n=536)的样本进行了数据分析。
在全州和单医院的样本中,患有精神疾病和没有精神疾病的亚组在六个月时的自我报告的危险物质使用方面没有显著差异。
这些结果表明,BI 的效果可能不受精神疾病诊断的影响。鉴于酒精和其他药物问题患者中精神疾病的高患病率,这一发现可能具有重要的公共卫生意义。