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A Hospital-based Managed Alcohol Program in a Canadian Setting

Authors :
Seonaid Nolan
Christopher Fairgrieve
Huiru Dong
Emma Garrod
Holly van Heukelom
Beena P. Parappilly
Mark McLean
Judith I. Tsui
Jeffrey H. Samet
Source :
Journal of addiction medicine.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

A managed alcohol program (MAP) is a harm reduction strategy that provides regularly, witnessed alcohol to individuals with a severe alcohol use disorder. Although community MAPs have positive outcomes, applicability to hospital settings is unknown. This study describes a hospital-based MAP, characterizes its participants, and evaluates outcomes.A retrospective chart review of MAP participants was conducted at an academic hospital in Vancouver, Canada, between July 2016 and October 2017. Data included demographics, alcohol/substance use, alcohol withdrawal risk, and MAP indication. Outcomes after MAP initiation included the change in mean daily alcohol consumption and liver enzymes.Seventeen patients participated in 26 hospital admissions: 76% male, mean age of 54 years, daily consumption prehospitalization of a mean 14 alcohol standard drinks, 59% reported previous nonbeverage alcohol consumption, and 41% participated in a community MAP. Most participants were high risk for severe, complicated alcohol withdrawal and presented in moderate withdrawal. Continuation of community MAP was the most common indication for hospital-based MAP initiation (38%), followed by a history of leaving hospital against medical advice (35%) and hospital illicit alcohol use (15%). Hospital-based MAP resulted in a mean of 5 fewer alcohol standard drinks daily compared with preadmission (P = 0.002; 95% confidence interval, 2-8) and improvement in liver enzymes, with few adverse events.Participation in a hospital-based MAP may be an effective safe approach to reduce harms for some individuals with severe alcohol use disorder. Further study is needed to understand who benefits most from hospital-MAP and potential benefits/harms following hospital discharge.

Details

ISSN :
19353227
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of addiction medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....10da1a09cd521c0f48cb3514165d678d