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  • 标题:HealthCall for the smartphone: technology enhancement of brief intervention in HIV alcohol dependent patients
  • 本地全文:下载
  • 作者:Deborah S Hasin ; Efrat Aharonovich ; Eliana Greenstein
  • 期刊名称:Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
  • 电子版ISSN:1940-0640
  • 出版年度:2014
  • 卷号:9
  • 期号:1
  • 页码:5
  • DOI:10.1186/1940-0640-9-5
  • 语种:English
  • 出版社:BioMed Central
  • 摘要:

    Background

    Heavy drinking jeopardizes the health of patients in HIV primary care. In alcohol dependent patients in HIV primary care, a technological enhancement of brief intervention, HealthCall administered via interactive voice response (HealthCall-IVR) was effective at reducing heavy drinking. The smartphone offered a technology platform to improve HealthCall.

    Methods

    Working with input from patients, technology experts, and HIV clinic personnel, we further developed HealthCall, harnessing smartphone technological capacities (HealthCall-S). In a pilot study, we compared rates of HealthCall-S daily use and drinking outcomes in 41 alcohol dependent HIV-infected patients with the 43 alcohol dependent HIV-infected patients who used HealthCall-IVR in our previous efficacy study. Procedures, clinic, personnel, and measures were largely the same in the two studies, and the two groups of patients were demographically similar (~90% minority).

    Results

    Pilot patients used HealthCall-S a median of 85.0% of the 60 days of treatment, significantly greater than the corresponding rate (63.8%) among comparison patients using HealthCall-IVR (p < .001). Mean end-of-treatment drinks per drinking day was similar in the two groups. Patients were highly satisfied with HealthCall-S (i.e., 92% reported that they liked using HealthCall-S).

    Conclusions

    Among alcohol dependent patients in HIV primary care, HealthCall delivered via smartphone is feasible, obtains better patient engagement than HealthCall-IVR, and is associated with decreased drinking. In HIV primary care settings, HealthCall-S may offer a way to improve drinking outcomes after brief intervention by extending patient engagement with little additional demands on staff time.

  • 关键词:HIV; Alcohol; Brief intervention; Technology intervention; Smartphone; Primary care
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