Harris Brett R, Shaw Benjamin A, Sherman Barry R, Lawson Hal A
a Department of Health Policy, Management, and Behavior, School of Public Health , State University of New York at Albany , Rensselaer , New York , USA.
b School of Social Welfare , State University of New York at Albany , Albany , New York , USA.
Subst Abus. 2016;37(1):161-7. doi: 10.1080/08897077.2015.1015703. Epub 2015 Mar 16.
Screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) has been endorsed by the American Academy of Pediatrics as an evidence-based strategy to address risky substance use among adolescents in primary care. However, less than half of pediatricians even screen adolescents for substance use. The purpose of this study was to identify variation in SBIRT practice and explore how program directors' and clinicians' attitudes and perceptions of effectiveness, role responsibility, and self-efficacy impact SBIRT adoption, implementation, and practice in school-based health centers (SBHCs).
All 162 New York State SBHC program directors and clinicians serving middle and high school students were surveyed between May and June of 2013 (40% response rate).
Only 22% of participants reported practicing the SBIRT model. Of the individual SBIRT model components, using a standardized tool to screen students for risky substance use, referring students with substance use problems to specialty treatment, and assessing students' readiness to change were practiced least frequently. Less than 30% of participants felt they could be effective at helping students reduce substance use, 63% did not believe it was their role to use a standardized screening tool, and 20-30% did not feel confident performing specific aspects of intervention and management. Each of these factors was correlated with SBIRT practice frequency (P < .05).
Findings from this study identify an important gap between an evidence-based SBIRT model and its adoption into practice within SBHCs, indicating a need for dissemination strategies targeting role responsibility, self-efficacy, and clinicians' perceptions of SBIRT effectiveness.
筛查、简短干预及转介治疗(SBIRT)已被美国儿科学会认可为一种循证策略,用于解决初级保健中青少年的危险物质使用问题。然而,不到一半的儿科医生会对青少年进行物质使用筛查。本研究的目的是确定SBIRT实践中的差异,并探讨项目主任和临床医生对有效性、角色责任以及自我效能的态度和认知如何影响SBIRT在学校健康中心(SBHC)的采用、实施和实践。
2013年5月至6月期间,对纽约州所有为初中和高中学生服务的162名SBHC项目主任和临床医生进行了调查(回复率为40%)。
只有22%的参与者报告采用了SBIRT模式。在SBIRT模式的各个组成部分中,使用标准化工具筛查学生的危险物质使用情况、将有物质使用问题的学生转介至专科治疗以及评估学生改变的意愿,这些实践的频率最低。不到30%的参与者认为他们能够有效帮助学生减少物质使用,63%的人不认为使用标准化筛查工具是他们的职责,20%至30%的人对进行干预和管理的具体方面缺乏信心。这些因素中的每一个都与SBIRT实践频率相关(P < 0.05)。
本研究结果表明,循证的SBIRT模式与其在SBHC中的实际应用之间存在重要差距,这表明需要针对角色责任、自我效能以及临床医生对SBIRT有效性的认知制定传播策略。