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The management of problem alcohol use among drug users in primary care : exploring patients’ experience of screening and treatment
Date Issued
2012-03-09
Date Available
2012-04-17T15:04:23Z
Abstract
Problem alcohol use is common among drug using patients who attend GPs in Ireland (35%) and other European countries. It is associated with adverse health outcomes including physical, psychological and social implications. These include various forms of liver disease exacerbated by the high prevalence of Hepatitis C among IDUs (62-81% in Ireland), fatal/non-fatal opiate overdose, mood anxiety, personality disorders, poor emotional health and wellbeing, early cessation of drug treatment, poor treatment outcomes and an increase in anti-social behaviour. Evidence has demonstrated the role of primary care in screening and treatment for problem alcohol use and the importance of a stepped approach to alcohol treatment. This study examined patients’ experience of being screened and treated for problem alcohol use, the barriers and enablers to addressing these issues and their views on how these therapeutic interventions can be improved.
Sponsorship
Health Research Board
Type of Material
Conference Publication
Copyright (Published Version)
2012 the authors
Subject – LCSH
Drug abusers--Alcohol use
Primary care (Medicine)
Alcoholism--Treatment
Language
English
Status of Item
Not peer reviewed
Conference Details
Abstract for paper presented at AUDGPI 2012, The Association of University Departments of General Practice in Ireland Annual Scientific Meeting Hosted By Department of General Practice The Royal College of surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland, 9th March 2012
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Name
Field_AUDGPI_UCD_repository_2012.pdf
Size
182.46 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
691587f7df746d2b60add139fcee1516
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