Rapport
Alcohol screening and brief intervention for youth: A practitioner's guide
Auteur(s) :
NIAAA ;
American Academy of Pediatrics
Année
2011
Sous-type de document :
Guide pratique / Manual
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Domaine :
Alcool / Alcohol
Thésaurus mots-clés
PRISE EN CHARGE
;
METHODE
;
RECOMMANDATION
;
ENFANT
;
ADOLESCENT
;
DEPISTAGE
;
INTERVENTION BREVE
;
MEDECIN
;
ALCOOL
Note de contenu :
CONTENTS:
Introduction
About this guide
Before you begin
Alcohol screening and brief intervention for youth ages 9-18: Four steps at a glance:
- For all patients:
Step 1: Ask the two screening questions
Step 2: Guide patients who do not drink
or assess risk in patients who do drink
- For patients who drink:
Step 3: Advise and assist
Step 4: At followup, continue support
Appendix
Frequently Asked Questions
Clinician support materials
References
Additional Resources
Introduction
About this guide
Before you begin
Alcohol screening and brief intervention for youth ages 9-18: Four steps at a glance:
- For all patients:
Step 1: Ask the two screening questions
Step 2: Guide patients who do not drink
or assess risk in patients who do drink
- For patients who drink:
Step 3: Advise and assist
Step 4: At followup, continue support
Appendix
Frequently Asked Questions
Clinician support materials
References
Additional Resources
Résumé :
If you manage the health and well-being of 9- to 18-year-olds, this Guide is for you.
It is designed to help health care professionals quickly identify youth at risk for alcohol-related problems. NIAAA developed the Guide and Pocket Guide in collaboration with the American Academy of Pediatrics, a team of underage drinking researchers and clinical specialists, and practicing health care professionals.
Why use this tool? A Practiioner's Guide
• It can detect risk early: In contrast to other screens that focus on established alcohol problems, this early detection tool aims to help you prevent alcohol-related problems in your patients before they start or address them at an early stage.
• It's empirically based: The screening questions and risk scale, developed through primary survey research, are powerful predictors of current and future negative consequences of alcohol use.
• It's fast and versatile: The screen consists of just two questions, which can be incorporated easily into patient interviews or pre-visit screening tools across the care spectrum, from annual exams to urgent care.
• It's the first tool to include friends' drinking: The “friends” question will help you identify patients at earlier stages of alcohol involvement and target advice to include the important risk of friends' drinking.
It is designed to help health care professionals quickly identify youth at risk for alcohol-related problems. NIAAA developed the Guide and Pocket Guide in collaboration with the American Academy of Pediatrics, a team of underage drinking researchers and clinical specialists, and practicing health care professionals.
Why use this tool? A Practiioner's Guide
• It can detect risk early: In contrast to other screens that focus on established alcohol problems, this early detection tool aims to help you prevent alcohol-related problems in your patients before they start or address them at an early stage.
• It's empirically based: The screening questions and risk scale, developed through primary survey research, are powerful predictors of current and future negative consequences of alcohol use.
• It's fast and versatile: The screen consists of just two questions, which can be incorporated easily into patient interviews or pre-visit screening tools across the care spectrum, from annual exams to urgent care.
• It's the first tool to include friends' drinking: The “friends” question will help you identify patients at earlier stages of alcohol involvement and target advice to include the important risk of friends' drinking.
Affiliation :
USA
Historique