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Medical-surgical patients with untreated hazardous drinking: Randomized controlled trial of the DO-MoST intervention to improve health outcomes over 12-month follow-up.

Authors :
Timko, Christine
Macia, Kathryn
Lewis, Mandy
Lor, Mai Chee
Blonigen, Daniel
Jannausch, Mary
Ilgen, Mark
Source :
Drug & Alcohol Dependence. May2024, Vol. 258, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

High prevalence and harmful consequences of hazardous drinking among medical-surgical patients underscore the importance of intervening with drinking to improve patients' health. This study evaluated a novel intervention, "Drinking Options - Motivate, Shared Decisions, Telemonitor" (DO-MoST). In a randomized design, 155 medical-surgical patients with untreated hazardous drinking were assigned to enhanced usual care or DO-MoST, and followed 3, 6, and 12 months later. We conducted intent-to-treat and per-protocol analyses. For the primary outcome, percent days of alcohol abstinence in the past 30 days, intent-to-treat analyses did not find superior effectiveness of DO-MoST. However, per-protocol analyses found abstinence increased between 3 and 12 months among participants assigned to DO-MoST who engaged with the intervention (n=46). Among DO-MoST-assigned participants who did not engage (n=27), abstinence stayed stable during follow-up. Group comparisons showed an advantage on abstinence for Engaged compared to Non-Engaged participants on change over time. Intent-to-treat analyses found that DO-MoST was superior to usual care on the secondary outcome of physical health at 12 months; per-protocol analyses found that Engaged DO-MoST-assignees had better physical health at 12 months than Non-Engaged DO-MoST-assignees. DO-MoST-assignees had lower odds of receiving substance use care during follow-up than usual care-assignees. Patients engaged in DO-MoST showed a greater degree of abstinence and better physical health relative to the non-engaged or usual care group. DO-MoST may be a source of alcohol help in itself rather than only a linkage intervention. Work is needed to increase DO-MoST engagement among medical-surgical patients with untreated hazardous drinking. • Untreated hazardous drinking harms medical-surgical patients and needs intervention. • RCT studied Drinking Options - Motivate, Shared Decisions, Telemonitor (DO-MoST). • Patients engaged in DO-MoST had better abstinence and physical health than others. • DO-MoST may be a source of alcohol help in itself, not only a linkage intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03768716
Volume :
258
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Drug & Alcohol Dependence
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177147607
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2024.111259