2012
DOI: 10.1186/1940-0640-7-14
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Screening and brief intervention (SBI): has it hit the tipping point?

Abstract: In 1961, Chafetz [1] reported the results of a randomized trial of brief advice by a psychiatrist to patients with alcoholism in the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) emergency department (ED); 42% of patients in the advice arm reported to an alcohol clinic versus only 1% in the control group. Fifty years later, in the Liberty Hotel, the same space as the former Charles Street Jail in Boston where there was a "drunk tank" and across from that same MGH ED, over 200 researchers and clinicians gathered to pres… Show more

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“…The negative association between documented brief intervention and receipt of specialty addiction treatment observed in the present study was unexpected, particularly when restricted to patients with documented AUD in the prior year, for whom AUD treatment is clearly indicated. Although the utility of brief intervention has been questioned , to our knowledge no prior study has found significantly lower likelihood of addiction treatment inpatients offered brief interventions. It is unclear what accounts for this unexpected finding, and multiple mechanisms may be at play.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…The negative association between documented brief intervention and receipt of specialty addiction treatment observed in the present study was unexpected, particularly when restricted to patients with documented AUD in the prior year, for whom AUD treatment is clearly indicated. Although the utility of brief intervention has been questioned , to our knowledge no prior study has found significantly lower likelihood of addiction treatment inpatients offered brief interventions. It is unclear what accounts for this unexpected finding, and multiple mechanisms may be at play.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%