Back to Search Start Over

Methodology and Demographics of a Brief Adolescent Alcohol Screen Validation Study.

Authors :
Bromberg, Julie R
Bromberg, Julie R
Spirito, Anthony
Chun, Thomas
Mello, Michael J
Casper, T Charles
Ahmad, Fahd
Bajaj, Lalit
Brown, Kathleen M
Chernick, Lauren S
Cohen, Daniel M
Fein, Joel
Horeczko, Tim
Levas, Michael N
McAninch, Brett
Monuteaux, Michael
Mull, Colette C
Grupp-Phelan, Jackie
Powell, Elizabeth C
Rogers, Alexander
Shenoi, Rohit P
Suffoletto, Brian
Vance, Cheryl
Linakis, James G
Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network
Bromberg, Julie R
Bromberg, Julie R
Spirito, Anthony
Chun, Thomas
Mello, Michael J
Casper, T Charles
Ahmad, Fahd
Bajaj, Lalit
Brown, Kathleen M
Chernick, Lauren S
Cohen, Daniel M
Fein, Joel
Horeczko, Tim
Levas, Michael N
McAninch, Brett
Monuteaux, Michael
Mull, Colette C
Grupp-Phelan, Jackie
Powell, Elizabeth C
Rogers, Alexander
Shenoi, Rohit P
Suffoletto, Brian
Vance, Cheryl
Linakis, James G
Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network
Source :
Pediatric emergency care; vol 35, iss 11, 737-744; 0749-5161
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:The aim of this study was to determine the psychometric properties of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) 2-question alcohol screen within 16 Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network pediatric emergency departments. This article describes the study methodology, sample characteristics, and baseline outcomes of the NIAAA 2-question screen. METHODS:Participants included 12- to 17-year-olds treated in one of the participating pediatric emergency departments across the United States. After enrollment, a criterion assessment battery including the NIAAA 2-question screen and other measures of alcohol, drug use, and risk behavior was self-administered by participants on a tablet computer. Two subsamples were derived from the sample. The first subsample was readministered the NIAAA 2-question screen 1 week after their initial visit to assess test-retest reliability. The second subsample is being reassessed at 12 and 24 months to examine predictive validity of the NIAAA 2-question screen. RESULTS:There were 4834 participants enrolled into the study who completed baseline assessments. Participants were equally distributed across sex and age. Forty-six percent of the participants identified as white, and 26% identified as black. Approximately one quarter identified as Hispanic. Using the NIAAA 2-question screen algorithm, approximately 8% were classified as low risk, 12% were classified as moderate risk, and 4% were classified as highest risk. Alcohol use was less likely to be reported by black participants, non-Hispanic participants, and those younger than 16 years. DISCUSSION:This study successfully recruited a large, demographically diverse sample to establish rates of the NIAAA screen risk categories across age, sex, ethnicity, and race within pediatric emergency departments.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Pediatric emergency care; vol 35, iss 11, 737-744; 0749-5161
Notes :
application/pdf, Pediatric emergency care vol 35, iss 11, 737-744 0749-5161
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391603019
Document Type :
Electronic Resource