This entry is our analysis of a review or synthesis of research findings considered particularly relevant to improving outcomes from drug or alcohol interventions in the UK. The original review was not published by Findings; click Title to order a copy. Free reprints may be available from the authors – click prepared e-mail. The summary conveys the findings and views expressed in the review. Below is a commentary from Drug and Alcohol Findings.
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Havard A., Shakeshaft A., Sanson-Fisher R.
Addiction: 2008, 103(3), p. 368–376.
Unable to obtain a copy by clicking title? Try asking the author for a reprint by adapting this prepared e-mail or by writing to Dr Havard at havard@unsw.edu.au. You could also try this alternative source.
Combining results from the few available evaluations of emergency department-based alcohol interventions suggests these substantially reduce alcohol-related injuries, but the estimate may not be applicable outside the USA or to all emergency patients.
Summary Brief alcohol interventions in emergency departments substantially reduce the number of alcohol-related injuries later suffered by the patients was the major conclusion of a meta-analysis A study which uses recognised procedures to summarise quantitative results from several studies of the same or similar interventions to arrive at composite outcome scores. Usually undertaken to allow the intervention's effectiveness to be assessed with greater confidence than on the basis of the studies taken individually. which combined outcomes from evaluations of emergency department-based interventions for alcohol problems in order to assess the extent to which these reduce alcohol consumption and related harm. An electronic search of 11 databases and a manual search of reference lists were conducted to identify studies published in peer-review journals between January 1996 and July 2007 (inclusive). Studies evaluating the outcome of an intervention designed to reduce alcohol problems in patients presenting to emergency departments were eligible for inclusion.
Thirteen such studies were identified for inclusion in the review. All trialled a brief intervention which typically involved one counselling session lasting up to an hour conducted by research project staff rather than the department's own staff. Eight of the counselling interventions incorporated motivational interviewing principles, and the same number provided handouts providing either standard or personalised advice and/or feedback on the patient's drinking or risk profile. Methodological quality of the studies was found to be reasonable, except for poor reporting of the size of the interventions' effects and inconsistent selection of outcome measures.
Combining the findings using meta-analytic techniques revealed that overall the interventions did not significantly reduce subsequent alcohol consumption, and impacts on drink-related problems were variable. However, six to 12 months after the interventions patients were approximately half as likely as comparison patients to have suffered an alcohol-related injury. Though this result derived from just three studies, it was highly statistically significant so very unlikely to have occurred by chance, and tests suggested that the effect was reasonably consistent across the studies.
The analysts concluded that while there are few evaluations of emergency department-based interventions for alcohol problems, such studies as there are suggest these reduce alcohol-related injuries. But they do not appear to do this by reducing alcohol consumption. The implication is that in respect of injury prevention, it may be more profitable to focus on harm minimisation strategies rather than strategies to reduce consumption. However, the authors cautioned that these results derived largely from studies which used research staff, not an option for sustained routine implementation, and that so few studies recorded injuries that the results can only be considered promising.
commentary The three studies from which the featured analysis derived its injury-reduction estimate were all from the USA, and two involved only teenage patients whose drinking would have been illegal in that country. In all three the patients were known to have recently been drinking or had a history of drink problems. This profile underlines the fragility of the estimate as an indication of the general impact of such interventions across the entire emergency department caseload and/or in other countries. The studies concerned were:
• A study of 18–19-year-old teenagers attending an accident and emergency department after an alcohol-related incident. Previously analysed by Drug and Alcohol Findings, this recorded the largest intervention impact of the three studies.
• A study of injured adults not admitted as inpatients who had recently consumed alcohol (but were not still drunk) or who registered a history of hazardous or harmful drinking on the AUDIT screening test. This has also been analysed by Drug and Alcohol Findings.
• A study of 13–17-year-olds treated in an emergency department after an alcohol-related event, whose drinking was revealed by themselves or by a positive blood alcohol concentration.
Last revised 16 March 2009
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