For adolescents and adults attending primary care settings who had experienced harm due to excessive drinking but were not alcohol dependent, moderate‐quality evidence shows that administration of a brief intervention (primarily feedback on screening results plus structured advice about risks of heavy drinking and ways to reduce consumption) led to reductions in the quantity of alcohol consumed (by 20.08 g/week; all results on average), binging episodes (by 0.08 binges/week), drinking frequency (0.13 days drinking/week), and numbers of people classified as heavy (426 vs 520 per 1000 people) or binge (318 vs 397 per 1000 people) drinkers over a 12‐month follow‐up period. All intervention effects were fairly small, albeit robust. In contrast,...
Importance: Heavy drinking among young adults is a major public health concern. Brief motivational i...
Background Brief interventions involve a time-limited intervention focusing on changing behaviour...
BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to determine the effects of a brief primary care provide...
Randomized controlled trials indicate that brief interventions are more effective than usual care in...
When adolescents and adults whose alcohol consumption had been screened as hazardous or harmful (mos...
Motivational interviewing may reduce the volume and frequency of alcohol consumption of adolescent a...
Manualized Alcoholics Anonymous or other 12‐step programs are effective in terms of abstinence and m...
Family‐based prevention programs may have little to no effect on reducing alcohol use in adolescents...
Objective: To determine whether brief interventions reduce alcohol consumption and improve outcomes...
Contains fulltext : 107837.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Objectives: To ...
Objective: This study tested the effectiveness of brief primary care provider interventions delivere...
Objectives: To assess the effects of a tailored, multifaceted intervention in primary care on the le...
Excessive drinking is a significant cause of mortality, morbidity and social problems in many countr...
OBJECTIVE: This study tested the effectiveness of brief primary care provider interventions delivere...
Background: Alcohol consumption and related harm increase rapidly from the age of 12 years. We evalu...
Importance: Heavy drinking among young adults is a major public health concern. Brief motivational i...
Background Brief interventions involve a time-limited intervention focusing on changing behaviour...
BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to determine the effects of a brief primary care provide...
Randomized controlled trials indicate that brief interventions are more effective than usual care in...
When adolescents and adults whose alcohol consumption had been screened as hazardous or harmful (mos...
Motivational interviewing may reduce the volume and frequency of alcohol consumption of adolescent a...
Manualized Alcoholics Anonymous or other 12‐step programs are effective in terms of abstinence and m...
Family‐based prevention programs may have little to no effect on reducing alcohol use in adolescents...
Objective: To determine whether brief interventions reduce alcohol consumption and improve outcomes...
Contains fulltext : 107837.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Objectives: To ...
Objective: This study tested the effectiveness of brief primary care provider interventions delivere...
Objectives: To assess the effects of a tailored, multifaceted intervention in primary care on the le...
Excessive drinking is a significant cause of mortality, morbidity and social problems in many countr...
OBJECTIVE: This study tested the effectiveness of brief primary care provider interventions delivere...
Background: Alcohol consumption and related harm increase rapidly from the age of 12 years. We evalu...
Importance: Heavy drinking among young adults is a major public health concern. Brief motivational i...
Background Brief interventions involve a time-limited intervention focusing on changing behaviour...
BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to determine the effects of a brief primary care provide...