74
Views
16
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Special Section: Prevention

Brief interventions: good in theory but weak in practice

&
Pages 11-18 | Received 01 Aug 2003, Accepted 27 Oct 2003, Published online: 12 Jul 2009

References

  • Mathers C, Vos T, Stevenson C. The burden of disease and injury in Australia. Canberra: AIHW, 1999.
  • Litt J. One GASP doesn’t make a CHAMP: the evidence for implementation of smoking cessation in the GP setting. In: Roche AM, McDonald J, eds. Catching clouds: exploring diversity in workforce development in the alcohol and other drugs field. 2002 Workforce Development Symposium Proceedings. Adelaide: National Centre for Education and Training on Addiction, 2002; 55–72.
  • Chikritzhs T, Jonas H, Heale P et al. Alcohol caused deaths and hospitilisations in Australia, 1990-1997. Perth: Na- tional Drug Research Institute, 2000.
  • Collins D, Lapsley H. Counting the cost: estimates of the social costs of drug abuse in Australia in 1998-9. Canberra: Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing, 2002.
  • McAvoy BR, Donovan RJ, Jalleh G et al. General practitioners, prevention and alcohol—a powerful cocktail? Facilitators and inhibitors of practising preventive medicine in general and early intervention for alcohol in particular: a 12-nation key informant and general practitioner study. Drugs 2001;8:103–17.
  • Hulse G, White J, Cape G, eds. Management of alcohol and drug problems. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2002.
  • Saunders JB. Editorial. Celebrating 20 years of the Drug and Alcohol Review. Drug Alcohol Rev 2002; 21:3–6.
  • Kreitman N. Alcohol consumption and the preventive paradox. Br J Addict 1986;81:353–63.
  • Stockwell TR, Hawks DV, Lang E, Rydon P. Unravelling the preventive paradox for acute alcohol problems. Drug Alcohol Rev 1996;15:7–15.
  • Roche AM. The shifting sands of alcohol prevention: rethinking population control approaches. Aust NZ J Public Health 1997;21:621–5.
  • Roche AM. Binge drinking: the definitional dilemmas. Health Promot J Aust 1999;9:128–32.
  • Roche AM, Evans KR. The implications of drinking patterns for primary prevention, education and screening. In: Grant M, Litvak J, eds. Drinking patterns and their consequences. Washington: Taylor & Francis, 1998:243–66.
  • Thom B. A social and political history of alcohol. In: Heather N, Peters TJ, Stockwell T, eds. Alcohol depen- dence and problems. West Sussex: John Wiley and Sons, 2001:15–31.
  • Anthony JC, Warner AW, Kessler RC. Comparative epidemiology of dependence on tobacco, alcohol, controlled substances and inhalants: basic findings from the National Comorbidity Survey. Exp Clin Psychopharmacol 1994;2:244–68.
  • Hester RK, Miller WR. Handbook of alcoholism treatment approaches: effective alternatives, 2nd edn. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1995.
  • Wilk AI, Jensen NM, Havighurst TC. Meta analysis of randomised control trials addressing brief interventions in heavy alcohol drinkers. J Gen Intern Med 1997;12:274–83.
  • Watson HE. Minimal interventions for problem drinkers: a review of the literature. J Adv Nurs 1999;30:513–19.
  • Bien TH, Miller WR, Tonigan JS. Brief interventions for alcohol problems: a review. Addiction 1993;88:315–36.
  • WHO Brief Interventions Study Group. A cross-national trial of brief interventions with heavy drinkers. Am J Public Health 1996;86:949–55.
  • Richmond R, Heather N, Wodak A, Kehoe L, Webster I. Controlled evaluation of a general practice-based brief intervention for excessive drinking. Addiction 1995;90:119–32.
  • Fleming MF, Mundt MP, French MT, Manwell LB, Stauffacher EA, Barry KL. Brief physician advice for problem drinkers: long-term efficacy and benefit-cost analysis. Alcohol Clin Exp Res 2002;26:36–43.
  • Holder HD, Blose JO. The reduction of health care costs are associated with alcoholism treatment. J Stud Alcohol 1992;53:293–302.
  • Proudfoot H, Teesson M. Investing in drug and alcohol treatment. Sydney: National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, 2000.
  • Moyer A, Finney JW, Swearingen CE, Vergun P. Brief interventions for alcohol problems: a meta-analytical review of controlled investigations in treatment-seeking and non- treatment-seeking populations. Addiction 2002;97:279–92.
  • Richmond R. Retracing the steps of Marco Polo: from clinical trials to diffusions of interventions for smokers. Addict Behav 1996;21:683–97.
  • McEwen A, Preston A, West R. Effect of a GP desktop resource on smoking cessation activities of general practi- tioners. Addiction 2002;97:595–7.
  • Saunders B, Wilkinson C, Phillips M. The impact of brief motivational intervention with opiate users attending a methadone programme. Addiction 1995;90:415–24.
  • Stephens RS, Roffman RA, Curtin L. Extended versus brief treatment for marijuana use. J Consult Clin Psychol 2000;68:898–908.
  • Copeland J, Swift W, Roffman R, Stephens R. A randomised controlled trial of brief interventions for cannabis use disorder. J Subst Abuse Treat 2001;21:55–64.
  • Baker A, Boggs TG, Lewin TJ. Randomized controlled trial of brief cognitive-behavioural interventions among regular users of amphetamine. Addiction 2001;96:1279–87.
  • Roche AM, Hotham ED, Richmond RL. The general practitioner’s role in AOD issues: overcoming individual, professional and systemic barriers. Drug Alcohol Rev 2002;21:223–30.
  • Wutzke SE, Gomel MK, Donovan RJ. Enhancing the delivery of brief interventions for hazardous alcohol use in the General Practice setting: a role for both general practitioners and medical receptionists. Health Promot J Aust 1998;8:105–8.
  • Spandorfer JM, Israel Y, Turner BJ. Primary care physi- cians’ views on screening and management of alcohol abuse: inconsistencies with national guidelines. J Fam Pract 1999;48:899–902.
  • Roche AM, Guray C, Saunders JB. General practitioners’ experiences of patients with drug and alcohol problems. Br J Addict 1991;86:263–76.
  • Holmwood C. Alcohol-related problems in Australia: is there a role for general practice? Med J Aust 2002;177:102–3.
  • Conigrave KM, Saunders JB, Reznik RB. Predictive capacity of the AUDIT questionnaire for alcohol-related harm. Addiction 1995;90:1479–85.
  • Dawe S, Loxton NJ, Hides L, Kavanagh DJ, Mattick RP. Review of diagnostic screening instruments for alcohol and other drug use and other psychiatric disorders, 2nd edn. Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia, 2002.
  • WHO ASSIST Working Group. The Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test (ASSIST): development, reliability and feasability. Addiction 2002;97:1183–94.
  • Hodgson R, Alwyn T, John B, Thom B, Smith A. The FAST alcohol screening test. Alcohol Alcohol 2002;37:61–6.
  • Gual A, Segura L, Contel M, Heather N, Colom J. AUDIT-3 and AUDIT-4: effectiveness of two short forms of the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test. Alcohol Alcohol 2002;37:591–6.
  • Shakeshaft AP, Bowman JA, Sanson-Fisher RW. Compu- ters in community-based drug and alcohol clinical settings: are they acceptable to respondents? Drug Alcohol Depend 1998;50:177–80.
  • Roche AM, Parle MD, Saunders JB. Managing alcohol and drug problems in general practice: a survey of trainees’ knowledge, attitudes and educational requirements. Aust NZ J Public Health 1996;20:401–8.
  • Durand MA. General practice involvement in the manage- ment of alcohol misuse: dynamics and resistances. Drug Alcohol Depend 1994;35:181–9.
  • Shaw S, Cartwright AKJ, Spratley T, Harwin J. Responding to drinking problems. London: Croom Helm, 1978.
  • Weller DP, Litt JCB, Pols RG, Ali RL, Southgate DO, Harris RD. Drug and alcohol related health problems in primary care—what do GPs think? Med J Aust 1992;156:43–8.
  • Mowbray A, Kessel N. Alcoholism and the general practitioner. Br J Psychiatry 1986;148:697–700.
  • Farmer R, Greenwood N. General practitioners’ manage- ment of problem drinkers—attitudes, knowledge and practice. Drugs 2001;8:119–29.
  • Deehan A, Taylor C, Strang J. The general practitioner, the drug misuser, and the alcohol misuser: major differences in general practitioner activity, therapeutic commitment, and ‘shared care’ proposals. Br J Gen Pract 1997;47:705–9.
  • Abouyanni G, Stevens LJ, Harris MF et al. GP attitudes to managing drug- and alcohol-dependent patients: a reluctant role. Drug Alcohol Rev 2000;19:165–70.
  • Mistral W, Velleman R. Substance-misusing patients in primary care: incidence, services provided and problems. A survey of general practitioners in Wiltshire. Drugs 2001;8:61–71.
  • McLaughlin D, Long A. An extended literature review of health professionals’ perceptions of illicit drugs and their clients who use them. An extended literature review of health professionals’ perceptions of illicit drugs and their clients who use them. J Psych Mental Health Nurs 1996;3:283–288.
  • McKeganey N. Shadowland: general practitioners and the treatment of opiate-abusing patients. Br J Addict 1988;83:373–86.
  • Roche AM, Watt K, Fischer J. General practitioners’ views of home detoxification. Drug Alcohol Rev 2001;20:395–406.
  • Vader JP, Aufseesser M. Physicians and intravenous drug users: attitudes and opinions in the Canton of Vaud, Switzerland. Int J Addict 1993;28:1587–99.
  • O’Brien CP, McLellan AT. Myths about the treatment of addiction. Lancet 1996;347:237–40.
  • Kmietowicz Z. GPs asked to do more for drug misusers. Br Med J 2002;324:501.
  • Merril J, Ruben S. Treating drug dependence in primary care: worthy ambition but flawed policy? Drugs 2000;7:203–12.
  • Glanz A. Findings of a national survey of the role of general practitioners in the treatment of opiate misuse: views on treatment. Br Med J 1986;293:543–5.
  • Fiellen DA, Butler R, D’Onofrio G, Brown RL, O’Connor PG. The physician’s role in caring for patients with substance use disorders: Implications for medical education and training. In: Haack MR, Adger H, eds. Strategic plan for interdisciplinary faculty development: arming the nation’s health professional workforce for a new approach to substance use disorders. Rhode Island: Association for Medical Education and Research in Substance Abuse, 2002:207–22.
  • Keleher H. Why primary health care offers a more comprehensive approach for tackling health inequities than primary care. Melbourne: National Public Health Partner- ship, 2002.
  • Anderson P, Kaner E, Wutzke SE, Wensing M, Grol R, Heather N, Saunders J. Attitudes and management of alcohol problems in general practice: descriptive analysis based on findings of a WHO international collaborative survey. Alcohol Alcohol 2003;38:597–601.
  • Anderson P, Laurant M, Kaner E, Grol R, Wensing M. Engaging general practitioners in the management of alcohol problems: results of a meta-analysis. J Stud Alcohol, in press.
  • Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing. Sum- mary of outcomes of the National Workshop on Practice Nursing in Australian General Practice. Canberra: Com- monwealth Department of Health and Ageing, 2001.
  • Spratley E, Johnson A, Sochalski J, Fritz M, Spencer W. The registered nurse population: findings from the National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses. Rockville, MD: US Department of Health and Human Services, 2002.
  • Centre for General Practice Integration Studies. Develop- ments in primary health care integration. Sydney: Centre for General Practice Integration Studies, University of NSW, 2001.
  • Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing. 2001-2002 budget initiative. Canberra: Commonwealth Depart- ment of Health and Ageing, 2001.
  • Lewis C, Resnick B. Nurse clinics and progressive ambulatory patient care. N Engl J Med 1967;277:1236–41.
  • Ministry of Health. Nurse practitioners in New Zealand. Wellington, NZ: Ministry of Health, 2002.
  • Reveley S. The role of the triage nurse practitioner in general medical practice: an analysis of the role. J Adv Nurs 1998;28:584–91.
  • Venning P, Durie A, Roland M, Roberts C, Leese B. Randomised controlled trial comparing cost effectiveness of general practitioners and nurse practitioners in primary care. Br Med J 2000;320:1048–53.
  • Norman R. Have you got an attitude problem? Caring for illicit drug-using patients. Contemp Nurse 2001;10:83–91.
  • Degenhardt L, Hall W, Teesson M, Lynskey M. Alcohol use disorders in Australia: findings from the National Survey of Mental Health and Well-Being. Sydney: National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, 2000.
  • Gossop M, Marsden J, Stewart D. Dual dependence: assessment of dependence upon alcohol and illicit drugs, and the relationship of alcohol dependence among drug misusers to patterns of drinking, illicit drug use and health problems. Addiction 2002;97:169–78.
  • Saunders B, Robinson S. Co-occurring mental health and drug dependency disorders: Workforce development chal- lenges for the AOD field. Drug Alcohol Rev 2002;21:231–7.
  • Nursing Council on Alcohol. Nursing Council on Alcohol: a nursing intiative targeting harmful alcohol use. Glasgow: Nursing Council on Alcohol, 2002.
  • Owens L, Gilmore IT, Pirmohamed M. general practice nurses’ knowledge of alcohol use and misuse: a question- naire survey. Alcohol Alcohol 2000;35:259–62.
  • Lock CA, Kaner E, Lamont S, Bond S. A qualitative study of nurses’ attitudes and practices regarding brief alcohol intervention in primary health care. J Adv Nurs 2002;39:333–42.
  • Deehan A, Templeton L, Taylor C, Drummond C, Strang J. Are practice nurses an unexplored resource in the identification and management of alcohol misuse? Results from a study of practice nurses in England and Wales in 1995. J Adv Nurs 1998;28:592–7.
  • Deehan A. Delivering the ‘sensible’ drinking message: the potential of primary care. London: UK Alcohol Forum, 2002.
  • Taylor DI, Pultz M. Towards the development of a nurse practitioner ‘model of care’ in drug and alcohol services. In: Roche AM, McDonald J, eds. Catching clouds: exploring diversity in workforce development in the alcohol and other drugs field. 2002 Workforce Development Symposium Proceedings. Adelaide: NCETA; 2002: 31–41.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.