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Alcohol consumption and related problems among primary health care patients: WHO Collaborative Project on Early Detection of Persons with Harmful Alcohol Consumption—I

491

Citations

19

References

1993

Year

TLDR

The WHO Collaborative Project is the first phase of a programme to develop early identification and treatment techniques for hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption. The study aimed to determine the prevalence of hazardous and harmful alcohol use among primary health care patients in several countries and to assess the correlates of drinking behaviour and alcohol‑related problems, thereby evaluating the need for cross‑national screening instruments. A total of 1,888 participants from Australia, Bulgaria, Kenya, Mexico, Norway, and the USA were comprehensively assessed for medical history, alcohol intake, drinking practices, and related physical or psychosocial problems. After excluding non‑drinkers and known alcoholics, 18 % had hazardous intake and 23 % reported at least one alcohol‑related problem; the scales showed high reliability and strong inter‑scale correlations, and the findings support the development of international screening instruments.

Abstract

Abstract This WHO collaborative project is the first phase of a programme of work aimed at developing techniques for early identification and treatment of persons with hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption. The aim of the present study was to determine the prevalence of hazardous and harmful alcohol use among patients attending primary health care facilities in several countries, and to examine the correlates of drinking behaviour and alcohol‐related problems in these culturally diverse populations. The broader purpose was to determine whether there was justification for developing alcohol screening instruments for cross‐national use. One thousand, eight hundred and eighty‐eight subjects in Australia, Bulgaria, Kenya, Mexico, Norway and the USA underwent a comprehensive assessment of their medical history, alcohol intake, drinking practices, and any physical or psychosocial problems related to alcohol. After non‐drinkers and known alcoholics had been excluded, 18% of subjects had a hazardous level of alcohol intake and 23% had experienced at least one alcohol‐related problem in the previous year. Intrascale reliability coefficients were uniformly high for the drinking behaviour (dependence) and adverse psychological reactions scales, and moderately high for the alcohol‐related problems scales. There were strong correlations between the various alcohol‐specific scales, and between these scales and measures of alcohol intake. Although the prevalence of hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption varied from country to country, there was a high degree of commonality in the structure and correlates of drinking behaviour and alcohol‐related problems. These findings strengthen the case for developing international screening instruments for hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption.

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