Titre : | Spreading alcohol brief interventions from health care to non-health care settings: Is it justified? [Editorial] (2016) |
Auteurs : | N. HEATHER |
Type de document : | Article : Périodique |
Dans : | Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy (Vol.23, n°5, October 2016) |
Article en page(s) : | 359-364 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Discipline : | SAN (Santé publique / Public health) |
Mots-clés : |
Thésaurus mots-clés ALCOOL ; INTERVENTION BREVE ; EFFICACITE ; DISPOSITIF DE SOIN |
Résumé : | The development and evaluation of opportunistic alcohol brief interventions (ABIs) began in Scotland in the 1980s in general hospital wards (Chick, Lloyd, & Crombie, 1985) and primary health care (PHC: Heather, Campion, Neville, & MacCabe, 1987). From these beginnings, ABIs have spread in several senses of the word: geographically to most parts of the developed world and some parts of the developing world; from randomised controlled trials to attempts at widespread dissemination in practice (Babor et al., 2007; Nilsen & Holmquist, 2010); from face-to-face encounters to electronic forms of intervention (Cunningham, Khadjesari, Bewick, & Riper, 2010); from hospital wards and general medical practice to a variety of medical (Crawford et al., 2014; Gentilello et al., 1999; Gilinski, Swanson, & Power, 2011; Hulse & Tait, 2003; Smith, Hodgson, Bridgeman, & Shepherd, 2003) and other health care (Dhital et al., 2015; McAuley, Goodall, Ogden, Shepherd, & Cruikshank, 2011) settings; and from health care (HC) to a variety of non-health care (NHC) settings judged to be suitable for ABI implementation. It is the last of these that is the focus of this special section of Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy. [Extract] |
Domaine : | Alcool / Alcohol |
Sous-type de document : | Editorial |
Affiliation : | Department of Psychology, Faculty of Health & Life Sciences, Northumbria University, UK |
Cote : | Abonnement |
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