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Volume 32, Issue 1, Pages 86-93 (January 2010)


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Motivation to change risky drinking and motivation to seek help for alcohol risk drinking among general hospital inpatients with problem drinking and alcohol-related diseases

Katharina Lau, Dipl. Psych.aCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Jennis Freyer-Adam, Ph.D.b, Beate Gaertner, Ph.D.b, Hans-Jürgen Rumpf, Ph.D.c, Ulrich John, Ph.D.b, Ulfert Hapke, Ph.D.d

Received 24 July 2009; accepted 2 October 2009. published online 09 November 2009.

Abstract 

Objective

The objective of this study was to analyze motivation to change drinking behavior and motivation to seek help in general hospital inpatients with problem drinking and alcohol-related diseases.

Method

The sample consisted of 294 general hospital inpatients aged 18–64 years. Inpatients with alcohol-attributable disease were classified according to its alcohol-attributable fraction (AAF; AAF=1, AAF<1 and AAF=0). Baseline differences in alcohol-related variables, demographics and motivation between the AAF groups were analyzed. Furthermore, differences in motivation to change, in motivation to seek help and in the amount of alcohol consumed from baseline to follow-up between the AAF groups were evaluated.

Results

During hospital stay, motivation to change was higher among inpatients with alcohol-attributable diseases than among inpatients who had no alcohol-attributable diseases [F(2)=18.40, P<.001]. Motivation to seek help was higher among inpatients with AAF=1 than among inpatients with AAF<1 and AAF=0 [F(2)=21.66, P<.001]. While motivation to change drinking behavior remained stable within 12 months of hospitalization, motivation to seek help decreased. The amount of alcohol consumed decreased in all three AAF groups.

Conclusions

Data suggest that hospital stay seems to be a “teachable moment.” Screening for problem drinking and motivation differentiated by AAFs might be a tool for early intervention.

a SHIP/Clinical–Epidemiological Research Unit, Institute of Community Medicine, Ernst-Moritz-Arndt University of Greifswald, 17487 Greifswald, Germany

b Institute of Epidemiology and Social Medicine, Ernst-Moritz-Arndt University of Greifswald, 17487 Greifswald, Germany

c Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Luebeck, 23538 Luebeck, Germany

d Robert-Koch Institute, FG 22, 13353 Berlin, Germany

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +49 3834 8619571; fax: +49 3834 866684.

PII: S0163-8343(09)00189-3

doi:10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2009.10.002


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