Department of Public Health, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia.
NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence: Indigenous Health and Alcohol, Sydney, Australia.
Addict Sci Clin Pract. 2018 Mar 29;13(1):5. doi: 10.1186/s13722-018-0108-2.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Community Controlled Health Services (ACCHSs) around Australia have been asked to standardise screening for unhealthy drinking. Accordingly, screening with the 3-item AUDIT-C (Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test-Consumption) tool has become a national key performance indicator. Here we provide an overview of suitability of AUDIT-C and other brief alcohol screening tools for use in ACCHSs.
All peer-reviewed literature providing original data on validity, acceptability or feasibility of alcohol screening tools among Indigenous Australians was reviewed. Narrative synthesis was used to identify themes and integrate results.
Three screening tools-full AUDIT, AUDIT-3 (third question of AUDIT) and CAGE (Cut-down, Annoyed, Guilty and Eye-opener) have been validated against other consumption measures, and found to correspond well. Short forms of AUDIT have also been found to compare well with full AUDIT, and were preferred by primary care staff. Help was often required with converting consumption into standard drinks. Researchers commented that AUDIT and its short forms prompted reflection on drinking. Another tool, the Indigenous Risk Impact Screen (IRIS), jointly screens for alcohol, drug and mental health risk, but is relatively long (13 items). IRIS has been validated against dependence scales. AUDIT, IRIS and CAGE have a greater focus on dependence than on hazardous or harmful consumption.
Detection of unhealthy drinking before harms occur is a goal of screening, so AUDIT-C offers advantages over tools like IRIS or CAGE which focus on dependence. AUDIT-C's brevity suits integration with general health screening. Further research is needed on facilitating implementation of systematic alcohol screening into Indigenous primary healthcare.
澳大利亚各地的原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民社区控制的卫生服务机构(ACCHSs)被要求对不健康饮酒进行标准化筛查。因此,使用 3 项 AUDIT-C(酒精使用障碍识别测试-消费)工具进行筛查已成为国家关键绩效指标。在这里,我们提供了 AUDIT-C 及其他简短酒精筛查工具在 ACCHSs 中使用的适用性概述。
我们回顾了所有提供关于酒精筛查工具在澳大利亚原住民中有效性、可接受性或可行性的原始数据的同行评审文献。使用叙述性综合方法来确定主题并整合结果。
全 AUDIT、AUDIT-3(AUDIT 的第三个问题)和 CAGE(削减、烦恼、内疚和警醒)这三种筛查工具已针对其他消费措施进行了验证,结果发现它们非常吻合。AUDIT 的简短形式也与全 AUDIT 相比表现良好,并且受到初级保健人员的青睐。将消费转化为标准饮品通常需要帮助。研究人员评论说,AUDIT 及其简短形式促使人们对饮酒进行反思。另一种工具,即原住民风险影响筛查(IRIS),共同筛查酒精、药物和心理健康风险,但相对较长(13 项)。IRIS 已针对依赖量表进行了验证。AUDIT、IRIS 和 CAGE 比危险或有害消费更关注依赖。
在伤害发生之前检测到不健康的饮酒是筛查的目标,因此 AUDIT-C 比专注于依赖的工具(如 IRIS 或 CAGE)具有优势。AUDIT-C 的简洁性适合与一般健康筛查相结合。需要进一步研究如何促进系统的酒精筛查在原住民初级保健中的实施。