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Impact of practice, provider and patient characteristics on delivering screening and brief advice for heavy drinking in primary healthcare: Secondary analyses of data from the ODHIN five-country cluster randomized factorial trial

Authors :
Eileen Kaner
Kathryn N. Parkinson
Peter J. Anderson
Colin Drummond
Paolo Deluca
Jillian Reynolds
Katarzyna Okulicz-Kozaryn
Miranda Laurant
Karolina Kłoda
Dorothy Newbury-Birch
Myrna Pelgrum-Keurhorst
Marcin Wojnar
Preben Bendtsen
Lidia Segura
Antoni Gual
Artur Mierzecki
Universitat de Barcelona
Family Medicine
RS: CAPHRI - R6 - Promoting Health & Personalised Care
Source :
European Journal of General Practice, 241-245, STARTPAGE=241;ENDPAGE=245;ISSN=1381-4788;TITLE=European Journal of General Practice, Recercat. Dipósit de la Recerca de Catalunya, instname, The European Journal of General Practice, Dipòsit Digital de la UB, Universidad de Barcelona, European Journal of General Practice, 23, 1, pp. 241-245, European Journal of General Practice, 23, 241-245, European Journal of General Practice, Vol 23, Iss 1, Pp 241-245 (2017), Anderson, P, Kloda, K, Kaner, E, Reynolds, J, Bendtsen, P, Pelgrum-Keurhorst, M, Segura, L, Wojnar, M, Mierzecki, A, Deluca, P, Newbury-Birch, D, Parkinson, K, Okulicz-Kozaryn, K, Drummond, C, Laurant, M G H & Gual, A 2017, ' Impact of practice, provider and patient characteristics on delivering screening and brief advice for heavy drinking in primary healthcare : Secondary analyses of data from the ODHIN five-country cluster randomized factorial trial ', European Journal of General Practice, vol. 23, no. 1, pp. 241-245 . https://doi.org/10.1080/13814788.2017.1374365, European Journal of General Practice, 23(1), 241-245. Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2017.

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 182502.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) BACKGROUND: The implementation of primary healthcare-based screening and advice that is effective in reducing heavy drinking can be enhanced with training. OBJECTIVES: Undertaking secondary analysis of the five-country ODHIN study, we test: the extent to which practice, provider and patient characteristics affect the likelihood of patients being screened and advised; the extent to which such characteristics moderate the impact of training in increasing screening and advice; and the extent to which training mitigates any differences due to such characteristics found at baseline. METHODS: A cluster randomized factorial trial involving 120 practices, 746 providers and 46 546 screened patients from Catalonia, England, the Netherlands, Poland, and Sweden. Practices were randomized to receive training or not to receive training. The primary outcome measures were the proportion of adult patients screened, and the proportion of screen-positive patients advised. RESULTS: Nurses tended to screen more patients than doctors (OR = 3.1; 95%CI: 1.9, 4.9). Screen-positive patients were more likely to be advised by doctors than by nurses (OR = 2.3; 95%CI: 1.4, 4.1), and more liable to be advised the higher their risk status (OR = 1.9; 95%CI: 1.3, 2.7). Training increased screening and advice giving, with its impact largely unrelated to practice, provider or patient characteristics. Training diminished the differences between doctors and nurses and between patients with low or high-risk status. CONCLUSIONS: Training primary healthcare providers diminishes the negative impacts that some practice, provider and patient characteristics have on the likelihood of patients being screened and advised. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov. Trial identifier: NCT01501552.

Details

ISSN :
17511402 and 13814788
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of General Practice
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8db85850b6d1fa483d21c33a34c35a29