Abstract

In this paper, we test path models that study the interrelations between primary health care provider attitudes towards working with drinkers, their screening and brief advice activity, and their receipt of training and support and financial reimbursement. Study participants were 756 primary health care providers from 120 primary health care units (PHCUs) in different locations throughout Catalonia, England, The Netherlands, Poland, and Sweden. Our interventions were training and support and financial reimbursement to providers. Our design was a randomized factorial trial with baseline measurement period, 12-week implementation period, and 9-month follow-up measurement period. Our outcome measures were: attitudes of individual providers in working with drinkers as measured by the Short Alcohol and Alcohol Problems Perception Questionnaire; and the proportion of consulting adult patients (age 18+ years) who screened positive and were given advice to reduce their alcohol consumption (intervention activity). We found that more positive attitudes were associated with higher intervention activity, and higher intervention activity was then associated with more positive attitudes. Training and support was associated with both positive changes in attitudes and higher intervention activity. Financial reimbursement was associated with more positive attitudes through its impact on higher intervention activity. We conclude that improving primary health care providers’ screening and brief advice activity for heavy drinking requires a combination of training and support and on-the-job experience of actually delivering screening and brief advice activity.

Highlights

  • Primary health care providers find screening and giving brief advice for heavy drinking a difficult business [1,2,3]

  • ODHIN demonstrated that up to 4 h training and support to primary health effectiveness trials is still debated in some academic circles [24,25], screening and brief alcohol intervention programs are recommended as good practice for preventive care in primary care systems worldwide [18,26,27,28]

  • The extent to which this evidence-base can be interpreted as efficacy or effectiveness trials is still debated in some academic circles [24,25], screening and brief alcohol intervention programs are recommended as good practice for preventive care in primary care systems worldwide [18,26,27,28]

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Summary

Introduction

Primary health care providers find screening and giving brief advice for heavy drinking a difficult business [1,2,3]. This can be changed with professional and organizational-based interventions [4,5]. During the 1970s, the Maudsley Alcohol Pilot Project was set up in the United Kingdom to make practical recommendations for an improved local response to dealing with drinking problems [6]. Report on alcohol [7], was premised on the view that to respond to drinking problems adequately, primary health care providers need to be involved. In the AAPPQ, for which a shortened version is available [10,11], role security measures role adequacy, for example, “I feel I can appropriately advise my patients about drinking and its effects”; and role legitimacy, for example,

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