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Screening Trauma Patients for Alcoholism According to NLAAA Guidelines with Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test Questions
Authors:Carl A. Soderstrom  Patricia C. Dischinger  Timothy J. Kerns  Joseph A. Kufera  David R. McDuff  David A. Gorelick  Gordon S. Smith
Affiliation:R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center, University of Maryland Medicine (C.A.S.);the Charles McC. Mathias National Study Center for Trauma and Emergency Medical Systems (P.C.D., T.J.K., J.A.K.) and the Department of Psychiatry (D.R.M.). University of Maryland School of Medicine;the Division of Intramural Research, National Institute on Drug Abuse (D.A.G.);and The Johns Hopkins Injury Prevention Center (G.S.S.), Baltimore, Maryland.
Abstract:Drinking pattern criteria (drinking frequency and number of drinks per occasion) issued by the National Institute on Alcohol and Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) to screen primary practice patients for alcohol problems were evaluated in 1216 injured patients treated in a regional trauma center. Vehicular crash victims predominated (50.2%, of whom 64.5% were drivers), followed by victims of violence (31.2%) and nonviolent-injury victims (18.5%). Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) questions #1 (drinking frequency) and #2 (drinks/day) were used to assess the patients for current alcohol dependence (CAD). AUDIT responses roughly approximating NIAAA guidelines (high threshold: drinks ≥ 4 times/week, ≥ 5 drinks/day) and those indicating less drinking (low threshold: drinks ≥ 2-3 times/week, ≥3 drinks/day) were chosen. Comparisons were made relative to sensitivity and specificity of responses in detecting CAD. When low threshold responses were used for either question, sensitivity to detect CAD increased overall (#1 from 0.53 to 0.80, #2 from 0.62 to 0.88) as well as among the subgroups of patients, whereas specificity remained high or at acceptable levels overall (#1 from 0.95 to 0.82, #2 from 0.92 to 0.71) and among the subgroups of patients. Study findings suggest that, among injured drivers and other groups of trauma center patients, lesser amounts of drinking should be used as screening criteria for CAD than are used for the general population.
Keywords:Alcohol Screening    Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test    Alcoholism    Trauma    Trauma Centers
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