Alcohol Consumption Clinical Trial
Official title:
Trial of Nurse-delivered Alcohol Brief Intervention for Hospitalized Veterans
Veterans drink, binge drink, and drive under the influence of alcohol at higher rates than non-Veterans do. Addressing alcohol misuse, the range of alcohol consumption from risky drinking to alcohol abuse and alcoholism, is a national priority for the VA. It is recommended that people keep their alcohol consumption below limits established by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). A type of 10-15 minute counseling known as "brief intervention" (BI) has been shown to help risky drinkers cut back to the NIH-recommended limits. This study will examine the impact of a nurse-delivered alcohol BI on hospitalized Veterans' weekly number of drinks, monthly number of binge drinking episodes, readiness to change drinking behavior, and alcohol-related problems. This preventative approach for reducing alcohol consumption is intended to help Veterans avoid many of the physical and psychosocial consequences of alcohol misuse.
Improving the identification and management of alcohol misuse is a VA priority. Alcohol
misuse includes the spectrum of alcohol consumption ranging from hazardous drinking to
alcohol use disorders (alcohol abuse and dependence). The VA recommends using a set of
clinical strategies referred to as Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment
(SBIRT) to identify and address alcohol misuse in primary care settings. Brief intervention
(BI), a core component of SBIRT, significantly reduces alcohol consumption, morbidity, and
healthcare utilization in hazardous drinkers, but its efficacy is not well-established
outside of outpatient settings. In the hospital setting, nurses are well-positioned to
deliver BI, but research is needed to determine the efficacy of inpatient nurse-delivered BI,
particularly with hazardous drinkers. The few previous trials of BI in the inpatient setting
demonstrated limited effects on alcohol consumption and alcohol-related problems, potentially
due to assessment reactivity--extensive patient assessment that inadvertently raises patient
awareness about drinking in both groups, mimicking the effect of BI and thus driving findings
towards the null. Additionally, very few of these trials involved nurse delivery of the
intervention and many included patients with alcohol use disorders, patients believed to be
beyond the "therapeutic reach" of BI.
The primary goal of this 3-arm randomized controlled trial is to examine the efficacy of
nurse-delivered alcohol BI with hospitalized patients who are hazardous drinkers and to
identify barriers and facilitators to implementation of BI in inpatient settings. Arm 1 (BI)
consists of Veterans randomized to nurse-delivered BI, Arm 2 (AC) consists of Veterans
randomized to an attention control, and Arm 3 (AC-LA) consists of Veterans randomized to an
attention control with limited assessment of readiness to change and adverse consequences of
alcohol use so as to reduce and evaluate assessment reactivity.
Specific Aim 1 is to determine the impact of a nurse-led BI on the alcohol screening status,
number of drinks/week, number of binge drinking episodes, readiness to change drinking
behavior, and adverse consequences of alcohol use in hospitalized hazardous drinkers.
Specific Aim 2 is to formatively evaluate the process of the intervention implementation to
inform the design and execution of a future, multi-site randomized effectiveness trial of the
intervention. A secondary aim is to identify factors, issues, and themes related to Veterans'
interest and motivation for changing their alcohol consumption.
We will recruit 320 hospitalized Veterans admitted to one of the three medical-surgical units
at the VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System. Veterans will be included who are >21 years old, able
to speak English, and are hazardous, non-dependent drinkers, as defined by criteria
established by the National Institute for Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism and by the Composite
International Diagnostic Interview Substance Abuse Module. Patients randomized to Arm 1 will
receive a three-part nurse-delivered BI. Patients randomized to Arms 2 and 3 will receive
usual care plus healthy lifestyle brochures addressing general healthy lifestyle behaviors,
such as limited alcohol consumption, tobacco cessation, and weight management. For Specific
Aim 1, we will use various multivariable linear and logistic regressions that account for
continuous outcomes, dichotomous outcomes, and clustering within medical units. Poisson
regressions or negative binomial regressions will be used if the continuous outcome measures
are not normally distributed. For Specific Aim 2, we will use basic descriptive statistics in
order to describe the numbers of deviations and interruptions to intervention delivery as
planned. Based on interventionist field notes, we will categorize the types of
deviations/interruptions. We will also use these descriptive statistics to describe duration
of the audio-recorded intervention; the presence/absence of various techniques within the BI;
the receipt/nonreceipt of additional alcohol feedback, advice, or counseling; and patient
responsiveness to/perceptions of the BI. We will also code brief free-text perceptions
responses using a modified grounded theory approach.
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