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Alcohol Electronic Screening and Brief Intervention: A Community Guide Systematic Review

Authors :
Kristin A, Tansil
Marissa B, Esser
Paramjit, Sandhu
Jeffrey A, Reynolds
Randy W, Elder
Rebecca S, Williamson
Sajal K, Chattopadhyay
Michele K, Bohm
Robert D, Brewer
Lela R, McKnight-Eily
Daniel W, Hungerford
Traci L, Toomey
Ralph W, Hingson
Jonathan E, Fielding
Source :
American journal of preventive medicine. 51(5)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Excessive drinking is responsible for one in ten deaths among working-age adults in the U.S. annually. Alcohol screening and brief intervention is an effective but underutilized intervention for reducing excessive drinking among adults. Electronic screening and brief intervention (e-SBI) uses electronic devices to deliver key elements of alcohol screening and brief intervention, with the potential to expand population reach.Using Community Guide methods, a systematic review of the scientific literature on the effectiveness of e-SBI for reducing excessive alcohol consumption and related harms was conducted. The search covered studies published from 1967 to October 2011. A total of 31 studies with 36 study arms met quality criteria and were included in the review. Analyses were conducted in 2012.Twenty-four studies (28 study arms) provided results for excessive drinkers only and seven studies (eight study arms) reported results for all drinkers. Nearly all studies found that e-SBI reduced excessive alcohol consumption and related harms: nine study arms reported a median 23.9% reduction in binge-drinking intensity (maximum drinks/binge episode) and nine study arms reported a median 16.5% reduction in binge-drinking frequency. Reductions in drinking measures were sustained for up to 12 months.According to Community Guide rules of evidence, e-SBI is an effective method for reducing excessive alcohol consumption and related harms among intervention participants. Implementation of e-SBI could complement population-level strategies previously recommended by the Community Preventive Services Task Force for reducing excessive drinking (e.g., increasing alcohol taxes and regulating alcohol outlet density).

Details

ISSN :
18732607
Volume :
51
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of preventive medicine
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........36a367ff99728715cc5aa81271cce273