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AuTomaTed Alcohol Misuse INterventions in a Bariatric Surgery Population: The ATTAIN Bariatric Pilot

INTRODUCTION: Alcohol screening and brief intervention has been shown to reduce unhealthy alcohol use, although widespread adoption into primary care practice has been slow. Patients undergoing bariatric surgery are at an increased risk of unhealthy alcohol use. The authors compared a novel, web-bas...

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Autores principales: West, Robert W, Davari, Shahriar B, Hammoud, Nadine M, Ismail, Mohamed H
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Permanente Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10015607/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36866440
http://dx.doi.org/10.7812/TPP/22.145
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author West, Robert W
Davari, Shahriar B
Hammoud, Nadine M
Ismail, Mohamed H
author_facet West, Robert W
Davari, Shahriar B
Hammoud, Nadine M
Ismail, Mohamed H
author_sort West, Robert W
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Alcohol screening and brief intervention has been shown to reduce unhealthy alcohol use, although widespread adoption into primary care practice has been slow. Patients undergoing bariatric surgery are at an increased risk of unhealthy alcohol use. The authors compared a novel, web-based screening tool called ATTAIN to usual care for real-world effectiveness and accuracy among bariatric surgery registry patients. METHODS: The authors analyzed the results of a quality improvement project that tested ATTAIN among bariatric surgery registry patients. Participants were stratified into 3 groups by surgery status (preoperative vs postoperative) and prior screening for unhealthy alcohol use (screened vs not screened in the past year). Participants in these 3 groups were divided into intervention plus usual care (n = 2249) and control (n = 2130) groups, with intervention being an email to complete ATTAIN, and control being usual care (eg, office-based screening). Primary outcomes included screening and positivity rates for unhealthy drinking behavior between groups. Secondary outcomes included positivity rates via ATTAIN vs usual care for individuals who were screened by both modalities. Chi-square test was used for statistical analysis. RESULTS: The overall screening rates were 67.4% (intervention arm) and 38.6% (control). The ATTAIN response rate was 47% of those invited. The overall positive screen rate was 7.7% (intervention) and 2.6% (control); p < .001 for both. For dual screened intervention participants, the positive screen rate was 10% (ATTAIN) vs 2% (usual care) with p < .001. CONCLUSION: ATTAIN is a promising method of increasing screening and detection rates for unhealthy drinking behavior.
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spelling pubmed-100156072023-03-16 AuTomaTed Alcohol Misuse INterventions in a Bariatric Surgery Population: The ATTAIN Bariatric Pilot West, Robert W Davari, Shahriar B Hammoud, Nadine M Ismail, Mohamed H Perm J Original Research INTRODUCTION: Alcohol screening and brief intervention has been shown to reduce unhealthy alcohol use, although widespread adoption into primary care practice has been slow. Patients undergoing bariatric surgery are at an increased risk of unhealthy alcohol use. The authors compared a novel, web-based screening tool called ATTAIN to usual care for real-world effectiveness and accuracy among bariatric surgery registry patients. METHODS: The authors analyzed the results of a quality improvement project that tested ATTAIN among bariatric surgery registry patients. Participants were stratified into 3 groups by surgery status (preoperative vs postoperative) and prior screening for unhealthy alcohol use (screened vs not screened in the past year). Participants in these 3 groups were divided into intervention plus usual care (n = 2249) and control (n = 2130) groups, with intervention being an email to complete ATTAIN, and control being usual care (eg, office-based screening). Primary outcomes included screening and positivity rates for unhealthy drinking behavior between groups. Secondary outcomes included positivity rates via ATTAIN vs usual care for individuals who were screened by both modalities. Chi-square test was used for statistical analysis. RESULTS: The overall screening rates were 67.4% (intervention arm) and 38.6% (control). The ATTAIN response rate was 47% of those invited. The overall positive screen rate was 7.7% (intervention) and 2.6% (control); p < .001 for both. For dual screened intervention participants, the positive screen rate was 10% (ATTAIN) vs 2% (usual care) with p < .001. CONCLUSION: ATTAIN is a promising method of increasing screening and detection rates for unhealthy drinking behavior. The Permanente Press 2023-03-03 /pmc/articles/PMC10015607/ /pubmed/36866440 http://dx.doi.org/10.7812/TPP/22.145 Text en © 2023 The Authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Published by The Permanente Federation LLC under the terms of the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.
spellingShingle Original Research
West, Robert W
Davari, Shahriar B
Hammoud, Nadine M
Ismail, Mohamed H
AuTomaTed Alcohol Misuse INterventions in a Bariatric Surgery Population: The ATTAIN Bariatric Pilot
title AuTomaTed Alcohol Misuse INterventions in a Bariatric Surgery Population: The ATTAIN Bariatric Pilot
title_full AuTomaTed Alcohol Misuse INterventions in a Bariatric Surgery Population: The ATTAIN Bariatric Pilot
title_fullStr AuTomaTed Alcohol Misuse INterventions in a Bariatric Surgery Population: The ATTAIN Bariatric Pilot
title_full_unstemmed AuTomaTed Alcohol Misuse INterventions in a Bariatric Surgery Population: The ATTAIN Bariatric Pilot
title_short AuTomaTed Alcohol Misuse INterventions in a Bariatric Surgery Population: The ATTAIN Bariatric Pilot
title_sort automated alcohol misuse interventions in a bariatric surgery population: the attain bariatric pilot
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10015607/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36866440
http://dx.doi.org/10.7812/TPP/22.145
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