Title: Alcohol Screening and Brief Intervention via Employee Assistance Program
1Alcohol Screening andBrief Intervention
viaEmployee Assistance Program
- Ken Joslyn, MD, MPH
- Medical Director, Quality Population Health,
Medica - Special thanks to Greg Greenwood (MBH)
- George Washington University
- Ensuring Solutions to Alcohol Problems
- (Eric Goplerud Tracy McPherson)
- www.integratedbehavioralhealth.org
2SBI Screening Brief Intervention
- SBI is generally effective in treating chronic
diseases such as smoking, obesity, diet and
nutrition - SBI for Alcohol Goal
- screen for hazardous and harmful drinking
- provider tailored brief interventions
- referrals, as appropriate
3SBI Screening Brief Intervention
- Alcohol SBIs consistently demonstrate
- Reductions in drinking
- Reductions in alcohol-related problems
- Reductions in healthcare utilization in high
acuity healthcare services - Alcohol SBI assessment
- Have been rigorously tested in a variety of
medical settings and delivered by a wide range of
providers
4Alcohol SBIs are Low-Cost Cost-Effective
- The cost of implementing alcohol SBI is modest
- 42 cents / patient screened
- ROI 4.3 1 in healthcare costs1
- i.e. ? 4.30 saved for each 1 invested in early
intervention - Higher ROI if include societal costs of ? MVA ?
crimes due to alcohol - Estimated ROI for 500 employees 47,030
- (includes estimate of insurance premium dollars
spent, GWU, Alcohol Cost Calculator for
Business2 )
1. Fleming MF et al Alcoholism Clinical
Experimental Research. 2002, 26(1)36-43. 2.
http//www.alcoholcostcalculator.org/roi/?pagemet
hodologyfleming_2002_b
5Medica EAP Telephonic Alcohol SBI Pilot
- Goal To test feasibility outcomes of
translating alcohol SBI to EAP telephonic care
setting - Who Medica members (inbound clinical calls only)
- Utilizing World Health Organization alcohol
screening brief intervention (SBI) protocol
6Medica EAP Telephonic Alcohol SBI Pilot
- Development process
- EAP Online Screening tool developed
- Training of EAP staff
- Train-the-trainer model starting with EAP
supervisors - Two sessions a) Conceptual overview, b) Online
workflow practice - Pilot launched August 4, 2008
- Follow-up QA support and supervision
- Ongoing evaluation
- Process evaluation for efficiency and eventual
ROI - Clinical outcomes for effectiveness
7Medica EAP Telephonic Alcohol SBI Pilot
- Partners / Collaboration
- Medica EAP and Behavioral Health Sciences
- Account Management
- George Washington University (GWU)Ensuring
Solutions to Alcohol ProblemsEric Goplerud
Tracy McPherson www.integratedbehavioralhealth.org
8Interim Screening Results 6 mo (8/4/08 2/15/09)
- 367 completed screens of 394 calls (93)
- 231 (63) females 136 (37) males
- Multiple reasons for not completed screens
being assessed - Of the 367 completed screens
- Risk 1 287 - 78 - - (no or low-risk drinking)
- Risk 2 41 - 11 - - (hazardous drinking)
- Risk 3 9 - 3 - - (harmful drinking)
- Risk 4 30 - 8 - - (abuse/dependence drin
king)
9Interim Screening Results 6 mo (8/4/08 2/15/09)
- 22 at-risk - 80/367Positive screen for at-risk
or higher drinking (gt Risk 2) - 11 at high risk - 39/367Positive screen for
high risk (Risk 3 or 4) - 10 referred for substance use behavioral health
services - 81 to follow-up with EAP
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11Why Alcohol SBI Is Important In Clinical Practice
- Providers trained to deliver
- ? face-to-face alcohol SBI
- Screen for alcohol problems 50 of time vs. 40
control - Deliver alcohol intervention 73 of time vs. 57
control - 13-34 reduction in average number drinks per
week - Provider intervention or treatment referral
12- We all need to be
- about this work !
- For the benefit
- of our patients
- and our society.
- Remember 22
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