Differences between hospital patients with alcohol problems referred for counselling by physicians' routine clinical practice versus screening questionnaires

U. Hapke*, H. J. Rumpf, U. John

*Corresponding author for this work
27 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Aims. To test the hypothesis that screening for alcohol-related disorders in a general hospital with questionnaires generates a target group of patients for alcohol counselling which differs from patients referred by physicians' routine clinical practice. Design. A prospective study with follow-up after 12 months. Setting. Medical and surgical wards of a general hospital. Participants. A sample of 298 patients detected by screening questionnaires (CAGE, MAST) was compared with a sample of 87 patients referred by physicians. Measurements. The main measurements were a diagnostic interview (SCAN), two questionnaires to estimate the severity of dependence and the motivation to change drinking behaviour (RCQ, LAS), and socio-demographic variables. Outcome criteria were utilization of remedial programmes, decreases in hazardous and excessive drinking and abstinence rates. Findings and conclusions. Patients referred by physicians were more often separated and unemployed, were more likely to be alcohol-dependent and to be more severely dependent, had a higher rate of alcohol-related diseases as reasons for admission, were more often motivated to change drinking behaviour, had a higher participation rate in remedial programmes and more often exhibited improvements in drinking behaviour compared with the sample identified by screening questionnaires. However, there was evidence of improvements in drinking in both samples. Data show that while screening reaches a less problematic sample with lower motivation to change, it is a worthwhile activity which extends the spectrum of patients eligible for brief interventions.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAddiction
Volume93
Issue number12
Pages (from-to)1777-1785
Number of pages9
ISSN0965-2140
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1998

Research Areas and Centers

  • Academic Focus: Center for Brain, Behavior and Metabolism (CBBM)

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