Brief Intervention by Community Health Workers for Unhealthy Drinking in Latinos
Drinking Heavy, Drinking Behavior, Drinking Excessive
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Drinking Heavy focused on measuring alcohol, intervention, Latino, community
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Latino ethnicity
- aged 21 years or older
- speak Spanish (monolingual Spanish or bilingual Spanish and English)
- exceeding low-risk drinking guidelines set by the NIH/NIAAA (for men: 15 or more drinks per week or 5 or more drinks on an occasion weekly in the past month; for women: consuming 8 or more drinks per week or 4 or more drinks on an occasion weekly in the past month)
Exclusion Criteria
- seeking treatment for alcohol problems
- any alcohol treatment in the past 30 days
- serious alcohol withdrawal symptoms as indicated by a score of 10 or higher on the Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol-Revised
- substantial problems associated with illicit drug use as indicated by a score of 6 or higher on the Drug Abuse Screening Test (DAST-10)
Sites / Locations
- Providence Center for Community Improvement
- Providence Health and Services
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
Intervention Condition: MET/SBCM
Control Condition: Alcohol education brochure
The combined Motivational Enhancement Therapy and Strengths Based Case Management (MET/SBCM) intervention will be used in the proposed study. The intervention consists of three 1-hour sessions. The sessions are structured to provide feedback to participants about their risks associated with alcohol use and to help them identify barriers and motivators to change. The sessions will aim to reduce drinking by promoting self-efficacy to change, setting goals and fostering utilization of medical, mental health and social services as needed. A comprehensive list of referrals will be provided. Sessions will occur 1-2 weeks apart.
Participants randomized to the control condition will be receive a Spanish-language version of an alcohol education brochure. Participants will be encouraged to read the brochure. The brochure will provide information about defining heavy drinking, harmful effects of drinking and symptoms of an alcohol use disorder. Control group participants will also receive a list of available clinics and resources from Providence staff. After the baseline visit participants in the control group will be contacted by phone twice over the next 4 weeks by the promotores to remind them about the 3-month follow-up appointment.