Title: Introduction to SIPS
1Introduction to SIPS
- Professor Colin Drummond
- Institute of Psychiatry
- Kings College London
2Topics
- What do we already know about screening and brief
interventions? - What research questions will SIPS address?
- What is SIPS and how did it come about?
- What will come out of SIPS over the next year?
3What do we already know?
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5Source Anderson Baumberg, 2006
6Alcohol Its a drug Jim, but not as we know it.
7Alcohol is a toxic and dependence producing DRUG
- Acute effects
- Highly variable
- Pleasure, relaxation
- Impaired judgement, coordination, balance
- Mood effects
- Argumentativeness and aggression
- Drowsiness
- Impaired consciousness
- Coma, respiratory depression and death.
- Chronic effects
- Toxic effects on organs
- Over 60 diseases
- Psychiatric disorders
- Foetal alcohol effects
- Psychoactive effects alcohol dependence
- 3rd leading cause of disability after tobacco and
hypertension - No universally safe level
8Alcohol use disorders prevalenceDrummond et
al., 2005
- 26 of the adult population have an alcohol use
disorder (AUD) - Includes 38 of men 16 of women aged 16-64
- 23 of the adult population are hazardous or
harmful alcohol users (7.1 million people in
England) - 21 of men and 9 of women engage in binge
drinking - Prevalence of alcohol dependence is 3.6 overall,
6 among men, and 2 among women (1.1 million
people in England)
Alcohol dependence is considerably more prevalent
than drug abuse
Alcohol Needs Assessment Research Project, 2005
9Chronic liver disease and cirrhosis mortality
rates per 100,000 population, 1950-2006
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11National AE study Drummond et al., 2003
- Funded by Strategy Unit/Dept of Health
- Maximum burden of alcohol on AE departments
- Regional variations
- 36 randomly selected AEs in England (18)
stratified by region and urban/rural - 116 researchers, 25 regional coordinators
- All AE attenders gt 18 years between 0900 and
0859hr Saturday/Sunday
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13National AE study
- Predictors of ETOH
- Young, white, males, single/divorced, unemployed,
living with parents or NFA, frequent attenders
(1.6x) - More often brought by police/ambulance
- Reasons for attendance
- Violent assaults involving weapons, RTA,
psychiatric emergency, DSH - Weapons fists, knives, shoes, glasses
- Locations clubs, pubs, public transport
- Correlations with general population data
- Fridays and Saturdays Estimated 1,000,000
alcohol related AE attendances per annum
14Screening and referral to an alcohol health
worker in AED (Crawford et al., 2004, Barratt et
al., 2005)
- Pragmatic RCT comparing leaflet with referral to
Alcohol Health Worker - Screening using Paddington Alcohol Test
- 599 randomised
- AHW group less drinking than leaflet
- Fewer AED attendances (mean 0.5)
- AHW more cost effective
15SBI in primary care
- Prevalence 20-30
- Frequent attenders
- Screening health promotion role
- Early detection intervention
- Effect of alcohol intervention on health outcomes
- 5-30 min of targeted advice
16Evidence-Base for SBI
- Freemantle 1993 - 6 trials in primary care
- 24 drop in consumption (95 CI 18 to 31)
- Moyer 2002 56 trials, 34 relevant to PHC
- Consistent positive effect, NNT 8-12 (smoking20)
- Cost savings found at 4 years in the USA
- Kaner 2007 29 trials in PHC AE
- Consistent positive effects 7 drinks less/week
- Evidence strongest for men, less work on women
- No significant benefit of longer versus shorter BI
17What is known already about SBI?
- AE SBI is effective and cost effective in
academic centres (e.g. St Marys Model) - Primary Health Care SBI is effective and some
evidence of cost effectiveness across range of
international settings - General Hospital SBI less effective
- General lack of research in UK
- In all cases SBI effective for opportunistic
intervention in non-treatment seeking
populations. Less effective for treatment
seeking/alcohol dependent patients
18What is not known about SBI?
- AE can it be effectively implemented outside
academic centres in UK? - PHC is it cost effective and can it be
implemented in typical PHC setting? - CJS is it feasible to implement SBI, and is it
effective? - All settings
- What are the best screening tools (short vs
longer) and method (universal vs targeted)? - Is extended BI better than 5 min advice?
- What are the barriers/facilitators for
implementation in the typical setting? - Effectiveness in females, young, BME
19Alcohol Screening and Brief Intervention Research
ProgrammeSIPS
AE St. Marys
'Scientia Vincit Timorem'
20Programme design
- Funded by Department of Health for 3 years
- Jointly led by IOP Newcastle University
- 3 cluster randomised clinical trials of alcohol
screening and brief intervention (PHC, AED, CJS)
to assess - What are the barriers/facilitators to
implementation in a typical setting? - What is the most effective screening method?
- What is the most effective and cost effective
intervention approach? - Total target of 2,403 subjects, completed 2,600
July 2009 - 6 and 12 months follow up, currently 80 _at_ 6
months (mainly phone)
21SIPS Research Project Group
- Kings College London
- Prof C Drummond (CI)
- Dr J Myles PI
- Dr P Deluca PI
- Mr T Phillips PI
- Ms K Perryman PI
- Dr M Cochrane
- Ms D Jeffery
- Dr M Hobbs
- Ms R Cappello
- Mr S Keating
- Ms L James
- Ms L Rail
- Ms J Reid
- Ms R Lee
- Mr S Gordon
- Ms L Floodgate
- Mr D Kerr
- Mr H Mosaheb
- Newcastle
- Prof E Kaner (DCI)
- Prof C Day PI
- Dr E Gilvarry PI
- Dr P Cassidy PI
- Dr D Newbury-Birch PI
- Prof Nick Heather PI
- Ms K Jackson
- Ms N Brown
- Ms M Clifford
- Ms E Phinn
- Ms C Shaw
- Ms R McGovern
- Ms A Hindhaugh
- Ms G Hawdon
- Ms D Carpenter
- Mr G Scott
- Ms J Armstrong
- Ms D MacDonald
229 Clusters
1 AED 2/3 PHC 2/3 CJS
1 AED 2/3 PHC 2/3 CJS
Newcastle General
Darlington Memorial
1 AED 2/3 PHC 2/3 CJS
1 AED 2/3 PHC 2/3 CJS
1 AED 2/3 PHC 2/3 CJS
Hexham
South Tyneside
Winchester
1 AED 2/3 PHC 2/3 CJS
1 AED 2/3 PHC 2/3 CJS
1 AED 2/3 PHC 2/3 CJS
1 AED 2/3 PHC 2/3 CJS
Kings College
St Thomass
Central Middlesex
North Middlesex
23How will we assess effectiveness?
- Effectiveness of implementation
- Extent of screening and intervention activity
- Attitudes to SBI implementation
- Patient outcome measures
- Alcohol consumption (extended AUDIT-C)
- Alcohol related problems
- Health related quality of life
- Health related and wider societal costs
24Website
25Training and intervention tools
26Presentations
- Accident and Emergency study Dr Paolo Deluca
- Primary care study Prof Eileen Kaner
- Criminal justice study Dr Dorothy Newbury-Birch
- Early findings on screening Prof Simon Coulton
- Discussant Dr Peter Anderson