ODHIN publications
Categories
ODHIN e-guidance ( 2 Files )
e-Guidance for the future of Identification and Brief Intervention (IBI) programmes based on the findings of the ODHIN project.
- e-Guidance for commissioners and funders of primary health care
- e-Guidance for primary health care providers
ODHIN eReaders ( 2 Files )
As part of the dissemination strategy of the ODHIN project and as a way to make more visible some of the results of the project some e-Readers will be published and available in this section.
Frontiers in Psychiatry - special issue ( 9 Files )
The journal Frontiers in Psychiatry is publishing a special issue on the research topic Brief interventions for risky drinkers with results arisen from the research performed by the ODHIN partners in collaboration with with two other EU funded collaborative research projects closely related to ODHIN: BISTAIRS and EWA.
The papers already published can be found in this two sections:
Other publication on Brief interventions for risky drinkers
Documents
ODHIN Publication Guidelines
Date added: | 04/24/2014 |
Date modified: | 04/24/2014 |
Filesize: | 64.07 kB |
Downloads: | 5645 |
Implementing training and support, financial reimbursement, and referral to an internet-based...
Date added: | 02/15/2013 |
Date modified: | 06/14/2016 |
Filesize: | Unknown |
Downloads: | 5530 |
Full title: Implementing training and support, financial reimbursement, and referral to an internet-based brief advice program to improve the early identification of hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption in primary care (ODHIN): study protocol for a cluster randomized factorial trial
Authors: Myrna N Keurhorst, Peter Anderson, Fredrik Spak, Preben Bendtsen, Lidia Segura, Joan Colom, Jillian Reynolds, Colin Drummond, Paolo Deluca, Ben van Steenkiste, Artur Mierzecki, Karolina KÅ‚oda, Paul Wallace, Dorothy Newbury-Birch, Eileen Kaner, Toni Gual and Miranda GH Laurant.
The European level of alcohol consumption, and the subsequent burden of disease, is high compared to the rest of the world. While screening and brief interventions in primary healthcare are cost-effective, in most countries they have hardly been implemented in routine primary healthcare. In this study, we aim to examine the effectiveness and efficiency of three implementation interventions that have been chosen to address key barriers for improvement: training and support to address lack of knowledge and motivation in healthcare providers; financial reimbursement to compensate the time investment; and internet-based counselling to reduce workload for primary care providers.