School of Medicine and Public Health, The University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW, 2308, Australia.
School of Medicine and Public Health, The University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW, 2308, Australia.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2018 Feb 1;183:253-260. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.11.016. Epub 2018 Jan 2.
A large proportion of hospital outpatients are alcohol dependent (AD) but few are engaged in treatment for their drinking. Brief intervention, designed to raise patients' awareness of their drinking, might encourage uptake of referral to specialty treatment. We assessed the feasibility of conducting a randomized trial evaluating the effectiveness of electronic brief intervention on the uptake of specialty treatment in hospital outpatients with likely AD.
This study was conducted in the outpatient department of a large public hospital in Newcastle, Australia. We randomly assigned adults who scored ≥10 on the AUDIT-C and were not currently receiving treatment for their drinking to electronic brief intervention (comprising an assessment of their drinking and personalized feedback) and referral (n = 59), or to referral alone (n = 64). We pre-specified two co-primary outcomes as the proportions of patients who (1) accepted and (2) attended a Drug and Alcohol outpatient clinic appointment. We interviewed 15 study participants to investigate why they had declined the appointment and what sort of help they might prefer to receive.
Ten patients (five in each group) accepted an appointment, and one patient (control) attended. Most interviewees' did not see their drinking as a problem or were confident they could manage it by themselves. Those who identified a preferred source of help expressed a preference for treatment by a GP.
Uptake of specialty treatment in hospital outpatients with likely AD was low regardless of whether they received brief intervention. Accordingly, a large randomized trial does not appear to be feasible.
很大一部分医院门诊患者存在酒精依赖(AD),但很少有人接受针对饮酒问题的治疗。简短干预旨在提高患者对饮酒问题的认识,可能会鼓励他们寻求专业治疗。我们评估了在澳大利亚纽卡斯尔一家大型公立医院的门诊患者中开展一项评估电子简短干预对可能患有 AD 的门诊患者接受专科治疗的效果的随机试验的可行性。
本研究在澳大利亚纽卡斯尔一家大型公立医院的门诊部门进行。我们将 AUDIT-C 得分≥10 且目前未接受饮酒治疗的成年人随机分配至电子简短干预(包括对其饮酒情况的评估和个性化反馈)和转诊组(n=59)或仅转诊组(n=64)。我们预先指定了两个主要结局指标,即(1)接受和(2)参加药物和酒精门诊预约的患者比例。我们采访了 15 名研究参与者,以了解他们为何拒绝预约以及他们可能更愿意接受何种帮助。
有 10 名患者(每组各 5 名)接受了预约,其中 1 名患者(对照组)参加了预约。大多数受访者认为自己的饮酒问题不严重,或者有信心能够自行处理。那些确定了首选帮助来源的人表示更愿意接受全科医生的治疗。
无论是否接受简短干预,患有可能 AD 的医院门诊患者接受专科治疗的比例都很低。因此,开展大规模随机试验似乎不太可行。