OBJECTIVE: To assess the effectiveness of brief interventions in heavy drinkers by analyzing the outcome data and methodologic
quality. DESIGN: (1) Qualitative analysis of randomized control trials (RCTs) using criteria from Chalmers' scoring system;
(2) calculating and combining odds ratios (ORs) of RCTs using the One-Step (Peto) and the Mantel-Haenszel methods. STUDY SELECTION
AND DATA ANALYSIS: A MEDLINE and PsycLIT search identified RCTs testing brief interventions in heavy alcohol drinkers. Brief
interventions were less than 1 hour and incorporated simple motivational counseling techniques much like outpatient smoking
cessation programs. By a single-reviewer, nonblinded format, eligible studies were selected for adult subjects, sample sizes
greater than 30, a randomized control design, and incorporation of brief alcohol interventions. Methodologic quality was assessed
using an established scoring system developed by Chalmers and colleagues. Outcome data were combined by the One-Step (Peto)
method; confidence limits and test for heterogeneity were calculated. RESULTS: Twelve RCTs met all inclusion criteria, with
an average quality score of 0.49 +/- 0.17. This was comparable to published average scores in other areas of research (0.42
+/- 0.16). Outcome data from RCTs were pooled, and a combined OR was close to 2 (1.91; 95% confidence interval 1.61-2.27)
in favor of brief alcohol interventions over no intervention. This was consistent across gender, intensity of intervention,
type of clinical setting, and higher-quality clinical trials. CONCLUSIONS: Heavy drinkers who received a brief intervention
were twice as likely to moderate their drinking 6 to 12 months after an intervention when compared with heavy drinkers who
received no intervention. Brief intervention is a low-cost, effective preventive measure for heavy drinkers in outpatient
settings.