Departments of Biostatistics and Data Science.
Surgery, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC.
Sex Transm Dis. 2023 Dec 1;50(12):810-815. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0000000000001869. Epub 2023 Sep 25.
Screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) is an evidence-based intervention for substance use. Health care professionals may not receive SBIRT training or know of substance use's intersection with sexual activity. This pilot survey inquired about SBIRT training history, attitudes, and comfort among outpatient health care professionals, including assessing sexual activity-related use.
We conducted a snowball cross-sectional survey of outpatient health care professionals at a large southeastern academic medical center in June 2021 with 4-point Likert questions covering demographics, substance use attitudes, SBIRT training history, and comfort implementing SBIRT. Analysis used descriptive statistics and stratification by demographic and practice characteristics.
Seventy-three professionals responded, of whom 82% were White and 66% were female. Forty-seven percent were 30 to 39 years old, 33% were internal medicine professionals, and 59% reported previous SBIRT training. All participants reported believing substance use is a significant health issue. Most reported that they were comfortable or somewhat comfortable assessing patients for substance use (85%), dropping to 60% discussing sexual activity. Advanced practice providers and physicians identified more comfort with rapport building around substance use than other health care respondents. Professionals in infectious diseases and psychiatry reported the greatest comfort assessing substance use with concurrent sexual activity.
There are gaps in SBIRT training and beliefs among health care professionals. Although health care workers report that assessing substance use is important, some professionals endorsed more comfort discussing substance use with patients than others, especially when inquiring about sexual activity. Future work could replicate the pilot to inform increasing comfort through training in the intersection of substance use and sexuality.
筛查、简短干预和转介治疗(SBIRT)是一种针对物质使用的循证干预措施。医疗保健专业人员可能没有接受过 SBIRT 培训,也不知道物质使用与性行为的交叉点。这项试点调查询问了门诊医疗保健专业人员的 SBIRT 培训历史、态度和舒适度,包括评估与性行为相关的使用情况。
我们于 2021 年 6 月在一家大型东南学术医疗中心对门诊医疗保健专业人员进行了滚雪球式的横断面调查,采用 4 点李克特量表涵盖人口统计学、物质使用态度、SBIRT 培训历史以及实施 SBIRT 的舒适度。分析采用描述性统计和按人口统计学和实践特征分层。
73 名专业人员做出了回应,其中 82%是白人,66%是女性。47%的人年龄在 30 到 39 岁之间,33%是内科专业人员,59%报告之前接受过 SBIRT 培训。所有参与者都报告认为物质使用是一个重大的健康问题。大多数人表示,他们对评估患者的物质使用感到舒适或有些舒适(85%),但对讨论性行为的舒适度降至 60%。高级实践提供者和医生在建立与物质使用有关的融洽关系方面比其他医疗保健人员更有信心。传染病和精神病学专业人员报告在评估同时存在的物质使用和性行为时最有信心。
医疗保健专业人员在 SBIRT 培训和信念方面存在差距。尽管医疗保健工作者报告说评估物质使用很重要,但一些专业人员对与患者讨论物质使用的舒适度比其他人更高,尤其是在询问性行为时。未来的工作可以复制试点研究,通过培训来增加对物质使用和性行为交叉点的了解,从而提高舒适度。