Cherpitel C J
California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute, Berkeley 94709.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 1994 Dec;36(3):167-73. doi: 10.1016/0376-8716(94)90142-2.
A probability sample of all patients seen in the four health maintenance organization (HMO) primary care clinics in one Northern California county (N = 314) are compared to patients from all five of the county-operated primary care clinics in the same county (N = 394) and to the general population of the county (N = 3069) on demographic characteristics, drinking patterns and alcohol-related problems. The HMO clinic patients were less likely to report frequent, heavy drinking, drunkenness or alcohol-related problems during the last year compared to those in the county clinics sample, and they were also less likely to report heavy and problem drinking compared to those in the general population. These data suggest problem drinking may not be over-represented in primary care practice in general, but rather may be more closely associated with characteristics of clientele served by a primary care practice than with those characteristics associated with a need for medical attention.
在北加利福尼亚州一个县的四家健康维护组织(HMO)初级保健诊所就诊的所有患者(N = 314)的概率样本,与该县所有五家县办初级保健诊所的患者(N = 394)以及该县的普通人群(N = 3069)在人口统计学特征、饮酒模式和与酒精相关的问题方面进行了比较。与县诊所样本中的患者相比,HMO诊所的患者在过去一年中报告频繁、大量饮酒、醉酒或与酒精相关问题的可能性较小,并且与普通人群相比,他们报告大量饮酒和问题饮酒的可能性也较小。这些数据表明,一般来说,问题饮酒在初级保健实践中可能并未被过度呈现,而是可能与初级保健实践所服务的客户群体特征更为密切相关,而非与那些与医疗需求相关的特征相关。