Article de Périodique
A systematic review of the effectiveness of brief interventions with substance using adolescents by type of drug (2003)
(Efficacité des interventions brèves par type de produit auprès d'adolescents usagers de drogues : revue systématique)
Auteur(s) :
TAIT, R. J. ;
HULSE, G. K.
Année
2003
Page(s) :
337-346
Sous-type de document :
Revue de la littérature / Literature review
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Refs biblio. :
59
Domaine :
Drogues illicites / Illicit drugs
Thésaurus mots-clés
ALCOOL
;
INTERVENTION BREVE
;
TABAC
;
PSYCHOTROPES
;
ADOLESCENT
;
ABUS
;
INTERVENTION
;
COMPARAISON
;
EFFICACITE
Résumé :
The aim of this paper is to evaluate the effectiveness of brief interventions (BI) with adolescents (mean age < 20) in reducing alcohol, tobacco or other drug (ATOD) use by means of a systematic review of BI for adolescent substance use in the English language literature up to 2002. We identified 11 studies involving 3734 adolescents. Follow-up ranged from 6 weeks to 24 months. Motivational interviewing was the predominant approach, underpinning eight studies: the remaining three provided personalized health information. Seven papers reported outcomes for alcohol interventions and four involved other substances (including one with separate alcohol outcomes). The overall effect size was d = 0.126 with borderline homogeneity (Q=14.9, df=9, p=0.09). The effect size from the eight alcohol interventions (n=1075) was classified as significant but "small" (d=0.275). The remaining non-alcohol studies were considered separately as interventions involving tobacco or multiple substance use. The two interventions with tobacco involved a substantial sample (n=2626) but had a very small effect (d=0.037), while the two interventions addressing multiple substances involved few participants (n=110) but had a medium-large effect (d=0.78). Across a diverse range of settings (dental clinic, schools, universities, substance treatment centres) and, therefore, probably diverse clients, BI conferred benefits to adolescent substance users. BI had a small effect on alcohol consumption and related measures. The data for tobacco interventions suggested a very small reduction, particularly with general community interventions. The effect of BI with multiple substances appears substantial but the small sample cautions against expansive generalization.
Affiliation :
Sch. Psychiatry and Clin. Neurosci., QEII Campus, Univ. WA, Nedlands WA, Australia
Cote :
Abonnement
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