Upshur Carole, Weinreb Linda, Bharel Monica, Reed George, Frisard Christine
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Massachusetts Medical School.
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Massachusetts Medical School.
J Subst Abuse Treat. 2015 Apr;51:19-29. doi: 10.1016/j.jsat.2014.11.001. Epub 2014 Nov 21.
A clinician-randomized trial was conducted using the chronic care model for disease management for alcohol use problems among n = 82 women served in a health care for the homeless clinic. Women with problem alcohol use received either usual care or an intervention consisting of a primary care provider (PCP) brief intervention, referral to addiction services, and on-going support from a care manager (CM) for 6 months. Both groups significantly reduced their alcohol consumption, with a small effect size favoring intervention at 3 months, but there were no significant differences between groups in reductions in drinking or in housing stability, or mental or physical health. However, intervention women had significantly more frequent participation in substance use treatment services. Baseline differences and small sample size limit generalizability, although substantial reductions in drinking for both groups suggest that screening and PCP brief treatment are promising interventions for homeless women with alcohol use problems.
针对一家为无家可归者提供医疗服务的诊所中82名女性的酒精使用问题,开展了一项临床医生随机试验,采用慢性病护理模式进行疾病管理。有酒精使用问题的女性接受常规护理或干预,干预包括初级保健提供者(PCP)简短干预、转介至成瘾服务机构,以及由护理经理(CM)提供为期6个月的持续支持。两组的酒精消费量均显著减少,在3个月时效应量较小,表明干预组更具优势,但两组在饮酒减少量、住房稳定性、精神或身体健康方面并无显著差异。然而,接受干预的女性参与物质使用治疗服务的频率显著更高。尽管两组饮酒量均大幅减少,表明筛查和PCP简短治疗对于有酒精使用问题的无家可归女性是有前景的干预措施,但基线差异和小样本量限制了研究结果的普遍性。