Skip to main content
Top
Published in: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 1/2012

Open Access 01-10-2012 | Meeting abstract

Impact of distance-learning training on substance use screening and brief intervention among health professionals and on their beliefs and attitudes toward drug use

Authors: Ana Paula L Carneiro, Denise De Micheli, Monica Maino, Jose Carlos Fernandes Galduroz, Yone Moura, Paulina CAV Duarte, Maria Lucia O Souza-Formigoni

Published in: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice | Special Issue 1/2012

Login to get access

Excerpt

Screening for alcohol and other drug (AOD) use followed by brief intervention (SBI) represents a useful tool for health professionals, since most people who are in the early stages of substance-related problems receive no guidance before developing significant consequences. In order to disseminate the techniques of SBI among Brazilian health professionals, the National Secretary on Drug Policy (SENAD), in partnership with the Drug Dependence Unit of UNIFESP, developed the distance learning program SUPERA. The aim of this study was to assess whether health professionals who participated in SUPERA changed their beliefs and behaviors related to AOD after completing the training. Health professionals from the Brazilian public health network who successfully completed the course (N = 1062) participated in the study. They answered a questionnaire on their beliefs and attitudes regarding AOD use before and after the course. After completing it, 91% of participants reported feeling more able to use SBI techniques than before, and 60% (compared with 37% pre-training) reported believing that demonstrating concern for patients’ AOD use could help reduce their consumption. Seventy-three percent (versus 50% pre-training) believed in the importance of BI to reduce AOD use, and 60% (versus 30%) reported believing in patients’ capacity to reduce AOD use. Most of the participants (66% after training versus 28% before) considered themselves to have an adequate level of knowledge about AOD use, and 83% (versus 22%) reported high confidence in their ability to detect AOD use. These data indicate positive changes in health professionals’ knowledge and attitudes regarding AOD use after the course, suggesting that distance learning is adequate to train health professionals in SBI. …
Metadata
Title
Impact of distance-learning training on substance use screening and brief intervention among health professionals and on their beliefs and attitudes toward drug use
Authors
Ana Paula L Carneiro
Denise De Micheli
Monica Maino
Jose Carlos Fernandes Galduroz
Yone Moura
Paulina CAV Duarte
Maria Lucia O Souza-Formigoni
Publication date
01-10-2012
Publisher
BioMed Central
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1940-0640-7-S1-A87

Other articles of this Special Issue 1/2012

Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 1/2012 Go to the issue