z-logo
Premium
The relative impact of brief treatment versus brief intervention in primary health‐care screening programs for substance use disorders
Author(s) -
Aldridge Arnie,
Dowd William,
Bray Jeremy
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
addiction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.424
H-Index - 193
eISSN - 1360-0443
pISSN - 0965-2140
DOI - 10.1111/add.13653
Subject(s) - propensity score matching , medicine , brief intervention , relative risk , intervention (counseling) , substance use , driving under the influence , illicit drug , alcohol dependence , poison control , injury prevention , psychiatry , alcohol , drug , environmental health , confidence interval , biochemistry , chemistry
Aims To assess the relative impact of brief treatment (BT) compared with brief intervention (BI) on changes in substance use behavior in primary care screening programs for substance use disorders, overall and by patient severity. Design and participants A total of 9029 patients with both baseline and follow‐up interviews were identified in the US Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) data from October 2004 and February 2008. Using a propensity score framework, multiple generalized linear mixed models and a local linear matching method with a difference in difference estimator, patients from the BI group that resemble BT patients were used to determine the relative treatment effect of BT. A total of 3218 of these US patients with baseline and follow‐up interviews were used in the final analysis sample after the propensity score‐matching procedure (1448 patients assigned to a BI service category and 1770 assigned to a BT service category). Setting United States. Measurements Dependent variables were the number of days of use in the past 30 days of any alcohol, alcohol to intoxication, illicit drugs and marijuana. Findings The relative impact of BT was not significant for alcohol (0.269; P  > 0.1) or alcohol to intoxication (0.462; P  > 0.1). BT was found to reduce the frequency of use of illicit drugs at follow‐up by 0.634 days more than BI ( P  < 0.05). Marijuana days were not affected significantly by assignment to BT (−0.128; P  > 0.1). Higher severity patients assigned to BT had a decrease in days of illicit drug use of 1.765 ( P  < 0.05). Conclusions In the United States, brief treatment appears to have a stronger impact on reducing illicit drug use than brief intervention but is similar to brief intervention for reducing alcohol use, alcohol to intoxication and marijuana use alone.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here