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The Frequency and Content of Discussions About Alcohol Use in Primary Care and Application of the Chief Medical Officer’s Low-Risk Drinking Guidelines: A Cross-Sectional Survey of General Practitioners and Practice Nurses in the UK

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Critchlow, N 
Calman, L 
Petty, R 
Rosenberg, G 

Abstract

ABSTRACT Aims: To examine how often General Practitioners (GPs) and Practice Nurses (PNs) working in primary care discuss alcohol with patients, what factors prompt discussions, how they approach patient discussions, and whether the Chief Medical Officer’s (CMO’s) revised low-risk drinking guidelines are appropriately advised. Methods: Cross-sectional survey with GPs and PNs working in primary care in the UK, conducted January-March 2017 (n=2,020). A vignette exercise examined what factors would prompt a discussion about alcohol, whether they would discuss before or after a patient reported exceeded the revised CMO guidelines (14 units per week), and whether the CMO’s drinking guidelines were appropriately advised. For all patients, participants were asked how often they discussed alcohol and how they approached the discussion (e.g. used screening tool). Results: The most common prompts to discuss alcohol in the vignette exercise were physical cues (44.7% of participants) or alcohol-related symptoms (23.8%). Most practitioners (70.1%) said they would wait until a patient was exceeding CMO guidelines before instigating discussion. Two-fifths (38.1%) appropriately advised the CMO guidelines in the vignette exercise, with PNs less likely to do so than GPs (OR=0.77, p=0.03). Less than half (44.7%) reportedly asked about alcohol always/often with all patients, with PNs more likely to ask always/often than GPs (OR=2.22, p<0.001). Almost three-quarters said they would enquire by asking about units (70.3%), compared to using screening tools. Conclusion: Further research is required to identify mechanisms to increase the frequency of discussions about alcohol and appropriate recommendation of the CMO drinking guidelines to patients.

Description

Keywords

Adolescent, Adult, Alcohol Drinking, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Guideline Adherence, Humans, Male, Mass Screening, Middle Aged, Nurse-Patient Relations, Physician-Patient Relations, Practice Patterns, Nurses', Practice Patterns, Physicians', Primary Health Care, Surveys and Questionnaires, United Kingdom

Journal Title

Alcohol and Alcoholism

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0735-0414
1464-3502

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford University Press
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_12015/4)
This research was supported by funding from Cancer Research UK. JMB is supported by the Medical Research Council (MRC) (Grant MC_UU_12015/4).