PLoS Medicine (Sep 2017)

Sustained effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of Counselling for Alcohol Problems, a brief psychological treatment for harmful drinking in men, delivered by lay counsellors in primary care: 12-month follow-up of a randomised controlled trial.

  • Abhijit Nadkarni,
  • Helen A Weiss,
  • Benedict Weobong,
  • David McDaid,
  • Daisy R Singla,
  • A-La Park,
  • Bhargav Bhat,
  • Basavaraj Katti,
  • Jim McCambridge,
  • Pratima Murthy,
  • Michael King,
  • G Terence Wilson,
  • Betty Kirkwood,
  • Christopher G Fairburn,
  • Richard Velleman,
  • Vikram Patel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002386
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 9
p. e1002386

Abstract

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BackgroundCounselling for Alcohol Problems (CAP), a brief intervention delivered by lay counsellors, enhanced remission and abstinence over 3 months among male primary care attendees with harmful drinking in a setting in India. We evaluated the sustainability of the effects after treatment termination, the cost-effectiveness of CAP over 12 months, and the effects of the hypothesized mediator 'readiness to change' on clinical outcomes.Methods and findingsMale primary care attendees aged 18-65 years screening with harmful drinking on the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) were randomised to either CAP plus enhanced usual care (EUC) (n = 188) or EUC alone (n = 189), of whom 89% completed assessments at 3 months, and 84% at 12 months. Primary outcomes were remission and mean standard ethanol consumed in the past 14 days, and the proposed mediating variable was readiness to change at 3 months. CAP participants maintained the gains they showed at the end of treatment through the 12-month follow-up, with the proportion with remission (AUDIT score ConclusionsCAP's superiority over EUC at the end of treatment was largely stable over time and was mediated by readiness to change. CAP provides better outcomes at lower costs from a societal perspective.Trial registrationISRCTN registry ISRCTN76465238.