Woliansky Matthew, Lee Kai, Tadakamadla Santosh
Oral Surgery, Dental School, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Emerg Med Australas. 2025 Feb;37(1):e14506. doi: 10.1111/1742-6723.14506. Epub 2024 Oct 21.
This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of Electronic Screening and Brief Intervention (e-SBI) in changing or reducing alcohol consumption and/or related risk behaviours among trauma patients compared to standard of care. Following Cochrane Collaboration's guidelines and PRISMA recommendations, a search of electronic databases (MEDLINE via PubMed, CINAHL, Scopus and Web of Science) and grey literature (Google Scholar) was conducted. Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) from 1995 to 2023 were included, focusing on e-SBI for alcohol misuse in trauma patients. Quality assessment utilised the Cochrane risk of bias tool. Bayesian meta-analysis was employed for synthesising outcomes. Four RCTs, totalling 2641 participants, were included. While e-SBI demonstrated a significant reduction in problematic alcohol consumption up to 6 months post-implementation, uncertainties were noted in risk behaviours determined by: average alcohol consumption, binge drinking and alcohol-related consequences. Heterogeneity in measurements and population variations contributed to the nuanced findings. The review suggests that e-SBI may be effective in reducing problematic alcohol consumption in the short term among alcohol-related trauma patients. However, uncertainties and methodological variations highlight the need for standardised outcome measurements, consistent reporting and further exploration of e-SBI's long-term impact. Relevance to health promotion: Understanding the effectiveness of e-SBI in managing alcohol-related issues among trauma patients is crucial for health promotion. Despite uncertainties, the findings underscore the potential of e-SBI as a scalable and accessible intervention. e-SBI in the setting of the present study, emphasises the importance of tailored approaches in public health strategies.
本系统评价和荟萃分析旨在评估与标准护理相比,电子筛查与简短干预(e-SBI)在改变或减少创伤患者酒精消费和/或相关风险行为方面的有效性。遵循Cochrane协作网指南和PRISMA建议,对电子数据库(通过PubMed检索MEDLINE、CINAHL、Scopus和Web of Science)和灰色文献(谷歌学术)进行了检索。纳入了1995年至2023年的随机对照试验(RCT),重点关注创伤患者酒精滥用的e-SBI。质量评估采用Cochrane偏倚风险工具。采用贝叶斯荟萃分析来综合结果。纳入了4项RCT,共2641名参与者。虽然e-SBI在实施后6个月内显著减少了有问题的酒精消费,但在以下风险行为方面存在不确定性:平均酒精消费量、暴饮和与酒精相关的后果。测量方法的异质性和人群差异导致了细微的研究结果。该评价表明,e-SBI可能在短期内有效减少与酒精相关的创伤患者中有问题的酒精消费。然而,不确定性和方法学差异凸显了标准化结局测量、一致报告以及进一步探索e-SBI长期影响的必要性。与健康促进的相关性:了解e-SBI在管理创伤患者酒精相关问题方面的有效性对于健康促进至关重要。尽管存在不确定性,但研究结果强调了e-SBI作为一种可扩展且可及的干预措施的潜力。本研究背景下的e-SBI强调了公共卫生策略中采用量身定制方法的重要性。