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New Alcohol Screening, Brief Intervention Manual Developed

Manual was created through partnership between AAFP, Baylor College of Medicine; supported by CDC

WEDNESDAY, July 26, 2017 (HealthDay News) — The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) has announced the development of a new alcohol screening and brief intervention manual for use in family medicine practices.

To support the efforts of family physicians to help prevent morbidity and mortality associated with risky alcohol use, the AAFP has released a manual addressing alcohol misuse. The manual was supported by funding from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and created through a partnership between the AAFP and Baylor College of Medicine Practice and Implementation Center.

The manual suggests that family physicians should implement alcohol screening and brief intervention, and guides them through the process. It also addresses barriers to implementation and selection of office champions who can implement the process. Other sections of the manual address how to identify office champions; assess the office’s current system for alcohol screening and intervention; define a new system for screening and intervention; and standardize the new screening system.

“It’s our hope that through this manual and other training programs planned thorough partnership with the CDC and the AAFP, we can disseminate evidence-based training and knowledge and implement routine screening and brief intervention for alcohol misuse in every family practice in the United States,” AAFP member Roger Zoorob, M.D., M.P.H., said in an AAFP news release.

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