National Centre for Education and Training on Addiction, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia.
Lyndon, Australia.
Drug Alcohol Rev. 2018 Jan;37(1):23-27. doi: 10.1111/dar.12619. Epub 2017 Oct 19.
Health and community service workers frequently encounter people with alcohol and other drug (AOD) problems in the course of their work, yet few have had training on how to respond effectively. A Drug and Alcohol First Aid workshop was developed by Lyndon, a non-government organisation treatment provider, and delivered to community and health sector workers and the general public. It presented evidence-based information regarding AOD use and harm reduction and treatment options. A pilot evaluation of the workshop was conducted to assess changes in participants' knowledge about AOD, methods of responding to use and attitudes towards individuals who use AOD, over a 3 month period.
A self-report evaluation survey was developed and administered to workshop participants at three time points: before (T1), immediately after (T2) and 3 months after the workshop (T3). Paired samples t-tests examined changes in knowledge, role adequacy, motivation and personal views.
A total of 142 participants completed the T1 survey, 184 completed the T2 survey and 98 completed the T3 survey. Between T1 and T2, there were significant increases in scores for knowledge and role adequacy, indicating significant improvements in these areas. No significant differences were found for motivation and personal views. At T3, knowledge and role adequacy scores remained significantly higher than at baseline.
Drug and Alcohol First Aid appears to be a viable initiative to improve AOD-related knowledge and role adequacy. However, alternative strategies may be required to shift negative attitudes towards individuals who use AOD. [Kostadinov VR, Roche AM, McEntee A, Allan JM, Meumann NR, McLaughlin LL. Brief workshops to teach drug and alcohol first aid: A pilot evaluation study. Drug Alcohol Rev 2018;37:23-27].
健康与社区服务工作者在工作中经常会遇到有酒精和其他药物(AOD)问题的人,但他们中很少有人接受过如何有效应对的培训。一个名为 Lyndon 的非政府组织治疗机构开发了一个毒品和酒精急救工作坊,并向社区和卫生部门的工作人员以及公众提供。该工作坊介绍了有关 AOD 使用、减少伤害和治疗选择的循证信息。在 3 个月的时间里,对该工作坊进行了试点评估,以评估参与者在 AOD 知识、应对使用方法和对使用 AOD 的个人的态度方面的变化。
开发了一份自我报告评估问卷,并在三个时间点(T1、T2 和 T3)向工作坊参与者进行了调查:T1 时(参加工作坊前)、T2 时(参加工作坊后立即)和 T3 时(参加工作坊后 3 个月)。配对样本 t 检验用于检验知识、角色胜任感、动机和个人观点的变化。
共有 142 名参与者完成了 T1 调查,184 名参与者完成了 T2 调查,98 名参与者完成了 T3 调查。在 T1 和 T2 之间,知识和角色胜任感的得分显著增加,表明这些领域有了显著的提高。动机和个人观点没有显著差异。在 T3 时,知识和角色胜任感的得分仍然显著高于基线。
毒品和酒精急救似乎是提高与 AOD 相关知识和角色胜任感的可行举措。然而,可能需要采取其他策略来改变对使用 AOD 的个人的负面态度。[Kostadinov VR、Roche AM、McEntee A、Allan JM、Meumann NR、McLaughlin LL. 教授毒品和酒精急救的简短工作坊:一项试点评估研究。毒品与酒精评论 2018;37:23-27]。