OBJECTIVE: To assess the effect of a screen for problem drinking on medical residents and their patients.
DESIGN: Descriptive cohort study.
SETTING: Veterans Affairs Medical Clinic.
PATIENTS: Patients were screened 2 weeks before a scheduled visit (n=714). Physicians were informed if their patients scored positive.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Physician discussion of alcohol use was documented through patient interview and chart review. Self-reported alcohol consumption
was recorded. Of 236 current drinkers, 28% were positive for problem drinking by the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification
Test (AUDIT). Of 58 positive patients contacted at 1 month, 78% recalled a discussion about alcohol use, 58% were advised
to decrease drinking, and 9% were referred for treatment. In 57 positive patient charts, alcohol use was noted in 33 (58%),
and a recommendation in 14 (25%). Newly identified patients had fewer notations than patients with prior alcohol problems.
Overall, 6-month alcohol consumption decreased in both AUDIT-positive and AUDIT-negative patients. The proportion of positive
patients who consumed more than 16 drinks per week (problem drinking) decreased from 58% to 49%. Problem drinking at 6 months
was independent of physician discussion or chart notation.
CONCLUSIONS: Resident physicians discussed alcohol use in a majority of patients who screened positive for alcohol problems but less often
offered specific advice or treatment. Furthermore, residents were less likely to note concerns about alcohol use in charts
of patients newly identified. Finally, a screen for alcohol abuse may influence patient consumption.
Key words alcohol abuse - problem drinking - screening - brief interventions
Presented in part at the Society of General Internal Medicine National Meeting, April 1994.