Department of Medicine, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2024 Jan;85(1):92-99. doi: 10.15288/jsad.23-00004. Epub 2023 Oct 3.
Underreporting of substance use is a frequent concern about studies based on self-report, but few robust studies have examined the agreement between different methods for capturing self-reported substance use. The current study therefore used repeated measures to compare self-reported substance use using (a) clinician interviewers and (b) self-administered computerized surveys in a sample that included both inpatients and community residents.
Adults age 18 years and older with problematic substance use were recruited from the community or an inpatient addiction treatment facility. At baseline ( = 588), 3-month ( = 469), and 6-month ( = 476) interviews, participants were asked whether they used alcohol, cannabis, cocaine, heroin, and prescription painkillers by two methods: semi-structured, clinician-administered interview, and computerized self-administered questionnaire. Agreement between these two methods was investigated using Cohen's kappa coefficient. Multivariable logistic regression assessed differences in the odds of discordance between the two measures by recruitment source, gender, age, race/ethnicity, employment status, marital status, and level of education.
There was moderate-to-strong agreement between clinician-administered and self-administered surveys for alcohol (kappa = .70-.88), cannabis (kappa = .87-.92), cocaine (kappa = .81-.89), and heroin (kappa = .90-.92). However, there was only weak-to-moderate agreement for nonmedical use of prescription painkillers (kappa = .55-.71), with the self-administered questionnaire capturing a higher prevalence of use (percent difference = 2.4%).
Clinician interviewers and self-administered surveys were shown to capture similar rates of self-reported use of alcohol, cannabis, cocaine, and heroin. Surveys assessing nonmedical prescription opioid use may benefit from using self-administered questionnaires.
基于自我报告的研究中,药物使用的漏报情况是一个常见问题,但很少有强有力的研究检验过不同方法捕捉自我报告药物使用情况的一致性。因此,本研究采用重复测量的方法,在包括住院患者和社区居民在内的样本中,比较了(a)临床访谈者和(b)自我管理的计算机化调查中自我报告的药物使用情况。
从社区或住院成瘾治疗机构招募年龄在 18 岁及以上、有问题的药物使用者。在基线(n=588)、3 个月(n=469)和 6 个月(n=476)访谈时,参与者通过两种方法被问及是否使用酒精、大麻、可卡因、海洛因和处方止痛药:半结构化的、临床医生管理的访谈和计算机化的自我管理问卷。使用 Cohen's kappa 系数来研究这两种方法之间的一致性。多变量逻辑回归评估了两种测量方法之间不一致的可能性差异,差异由招募来源、性别、年龄、种族/民族、就业状况、婚姻状况和教育程度决定。
临床医生管理和自我管理调查之间在酒精(kappa =.70-.88)、大麻(kappa =.87-.92)、可卡因(kappa =.81-.89)和海洛因(kappa =.90-.92)方面有中度到高度的一致性。然而,对于非医疗用途的处方止痛药,只有弱到中度的一致性(kappa =.55-.71),自我管理问卷的使用率更高(差异百分比=2.4%)。
临床访谈者和自我管理调查都能捕捉到类似的自我报告的酒精、大麻、可卡因和海洛因使用情况。评估非医疗用途处方阿片类药物的调查可能受益于使用自我管理问卷。