Screening for Alcohol Problems in Primary Care; A Systematic Review.

Background; Primary care physicians can play a unique role in recognizing and treating patients with alcohol problems.

Objective; To evaluate the accuracy of screening methods for alcohol problems in primary care.

Methods; We performed a search of MEDLINE for years 1966 through 1998. We included studies that were in English, were performed in primary care, and reported the performance characteristics of screening methods for alcohol problems against a criterion standard. Two reviewers appraised all articles for methodological content and results.

Results; Thirty-eight studies were identified. Eleven screened for at-risk, hazardous, or harmful drinking; 27 screened for alcohol abuse and dependence. A variety of screening methods were evaluated.

The Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) was most effective in identifying subjects with at-risk, hazardous, or harmful drinking (sensitivity, 51%-97%; specificity, 78%-96%),

while the CAGE questions proved superior for detecting alcohol abuse and dependence (sensitivity, 43%-94%; specificity, 70%-97%).

These 2 formal screening instruments consistently performed better than other methods, including quantity-frequency questions. The studies inconsistently adhered to methodological standards for diagnostic test research: 3 (8%) provided a full description of patient spectrum (demographics and comorbidity), 30 (79%) avoided workup bias, 12 (of 34 studies [35%]) avoided review bias, and 21 (55%) performed an analysis in pertinent clinical subgroups.

Conclusions; Despite methodological limitations, the literature supports the use of formal screening instruments over other clinical measures to increase the recognition of alcohol problems in primary care. Future research in this field will benefit from increased adherence to methodological standards for diagnostic tests.

Research report; David A. Fiellin; M. Carrington Reid, MD; Patrick G. O’Connor. Screening for Alcohol Problems in Primary Care; A Systematic Review. Arch Intern Med. 2000;160.

Brief-TSF uses the CAGE and the AUDIT to identify alcohol use disorders.

It Will Never Happen to Me: Growing Up With Addiction As Youngsters, Adolescents, Adults

Related Reading:

Clinical Supervision in Alcohol and Drug  Abuse Counseling: Principles, Models, Methods
Under the Influence: A Guide to the Myths and Realities of Alcoholism
Alcohol, Other Drugs, and Behavior: Psychological Research Perspectives
Basic Legal Research: Tools and Strategies
The Best I Can Be: Living with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome-Effects (Revised) (Mom's Choice Awards Recipient)
  • Share/Bookmark

Random Posts

Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!