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Howard B. Moss - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Screening and Brief Intervention for Underage Drinkers
    Mayo Clinic proceedings, 2010
    Co-Authors: Duncan B. Clark, Adam J. Gordon, Lorraine Ettaro, Jill M. Owens, Howard B. Moss
    Abstract:

    In a 2007 report, the US Surgeon General called for Health Care professionals to renew efforts to reduce underage drinking. Focusing on the adolescent patient, this review provides Health Care professionals with recommendations for alcohol-related screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment. MEDLINE and published reviews were used to identify relevant literature. Several brief screening methods have been shown to effectively identify underage drinkers likely to have alcohol use disorders. After diagnostic assessment when germane, the initial intervention typically focuses on education, motivation for change, and consideration of treatment options. Internet-accessible resources providing effective brief interventions are available, along with supplemental suggestions for parents. Recent changes in federal and commercial insurance reimbursement policies provide some fiscal support for these services, although rate increases and expanded applicability may be required to prompt the participation of many practitioners. Nevertheless, advances in clinical methods and progress on reimbursement policies have made screening and brief intervention for underage drinking more feasible in general Health Care Practice.

  • Screening and Brief Intervention for Underage Drinkers review
    2010
    Co-Authors: Duncan B. Clark, Adam J. Gordon, Lorraine Ettaro, Jill M. Owens, Howard B. Moss
    Abstract:

    In a 2007 report, the US Surgeon General called for Health Care professionals to renew efforts to reduce underage drinking. Focusing on the adolescent patient, this review provides Health Care professionals with recommendations for alcohol-related screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment. MEDLINE and published reviews were used to identify relevant literature. Several brief screening methods have been shown to effectively identify underage drinkers likely to have alcohol use disorders. After diagnostic assessment when germane, the initial interven- tion typically focuses on education, motivation for change, and consideration of treatment options. Internet-accessible resources providing effective brief interventions are available, along with supplemental suggestions for parents. Recent changes in federal and commercial insurance reimbursement policies provide some fiscal support for these services, although rate increases and ex- panded applicability may be required to prompt the participation of many practitioners. Nevertheless, advances in clinical methods and progress on reimbursement policies have made screening and brief intervention for underage drinking more feasible in general Health Care Practice.

Duncan B. Clark - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Screening and Brief Intervention for Underage Drinkers
    Mayo Clinic proceedings, 2010
    Co-Authors: Duncan B. Clark, Adam J. Gordon, Lorraine Ettaro, Jill M. Owens, Howard B. Moss
    Abstract:

    In a 2007 report, the US Surgeon General called for Health Care professionals to renew efforts to reduce underage drinking. Focusing on the adolescent patient, this review provides Health Care professionals with recommendations for alcohol-related screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment. MEDLINE and published reviews were used to identify relevant literature. Several brief screening methods have been shown to effectively identify underage drinkers likely to have alcohol use disorders. After diagnostic assessment when germane, the initial intervention typically focuses on education, motivation for change, and consideration of treatment options. Internet-accessible resources providing effective brief interventions are available, along with supplemental suggestions for parents. Recent changes in federal and commercial insurance reimbursement policies provide some fiscal support for these services, although rate increases and expanded applicability may be required to prompt the participation of many practitioners. Nevertheless, advances in clinical methods and progress on reimbursement policies have made screening and brief intervention for underage drinking more feasible in general Health Care Practice.

  • Screening and Brief Intervention for Underage Drinkers review
    2010
    Co-Authors: Duncan B. Clark, Adam J. Gordon, Lorraine Ettaro, Jill M. Owens, Howard B. Moss
    Abstract:

    In a 2007 report, the US Surgeon General called for Health Care professionals to renew efforts to reduce underage drinking. Focusing on the adolescent patient, this review provides Health Care professionals with recommendations for alcohol-related screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment. MEDLINE and published reviews were used to identify relevant literature. Several brief screening methods have been shown to effectively identify underage drinkers likely to have alcohol use disorders. After diagnostic assessment when germane, the initial interven- tion typically focuses on education, motivation for change, and consideration of treatment options. Internet-accessible resources providing effective brief interventions are available, along with supplemental suggestions for parents. Recent changes in federal and commercial insurance reimbursement policies provide some fiscal support for these services, although rate increases and ex- panded applicability may be required to prompt the participation of many practitioners. Nevertheless, advances in clinical methods and progress on reimbursement policies have made screening and brief intervention for underage drinking more feasible in general Health Care Practice.

Paul Chrisp - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Reaching a shared understanding of shared decision making in Health Care: NICE's experience of scoping the shared decision making guideline
    Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 2019
    Co-Authors: Clare Wohlgemuth, Katrina Penman, Monica Desai, Kay Nolan, Nichole Taske, Paul Chrisp
    Abstract:

    NICE's guideline on shared decision making, currently under development, endeavours to support shared decision making as part of routine Health Care Practice. In this article, we summarize our learning to date, gained through the scoping of the guideline, on the key challenges that need to be addressed in the guideline. The production of a scope is the first stage in the development of a NICE guideline, setting the parameters for what will be considered in the guideline. The process for scoping the shared decision making guideline involved discussion with early recruited committee members and engagement with registered stakeholders, through both a workshop and formal consultation. Important, and sometimes divergent, viewpoints about shared decision making were revealed through this process. The key challenges centred on the issues of a need for a common definition of shared decision making, measurability, opportunities, barriers to implementation, and feasibility. Recognizing these challenges aided the refinement of the scope in terms of what the guideline will cover, draft questions and main outcomes for consideration.

Margaret Holmes-rovner - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • International collaboration in shared decision-making: The International Shared Decision Making (ISDM) conference history and prospects
    Patient Education and Counseling, 2008
    Co-Authors: Margaret Holmes-rovner
    Abstract:

    Abstract Objective Analyze the role of collaboration in the International Shared Decision Making organization (ISDM). Methods Case study of the seven year history of ISDM as a professional network. Results The International Shared Decision Making meeting Conference (ISDM) has held four biennial meetings since its inception in 2001. It is a freestanding professional meeting, with no permanent institutional support and no formal governance structure. In both its history and its prospects, collaboration among attendees has been pivotal to its growth. It both attracts and holds its “members” through the strength of the relationships formed during and between meetings. Exchanges in ISDM are informational, collegial, and indirectly economic. Conclusion ISDM's future rests on keeping all three functions Healthy. It must maintain a focus on putting the shared decision making work first through becoming a “worknet”. Technologies that promote shared decision making can then be assembled and developed that support transformation of Health Care. Practice Implications Innovative professional organizations need to develop their work through deliberate development of networking techniques to move innovation into Practice.

Adam J. Gordon - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Screening and Brief Intervention for Underage Drinkers
    Mayo Clinic proceedings, 2010
    Co-Authors: Duncan B. Clark, Adam J. Gordon, Lorraine Ettaro, Jill M. Owens, Howard B. Moss
    Abstract:

    In a 2007 report, the US Surgeon General called for Health Care professionals to renew efforts to reduce underage drinking. Focusing on the adolescent patient, this review provides Health Care professionals with recommendations for alcohol-related screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment. MEDLINE and published reviews were used to identify relevant literature. Several brief screening methods have been shown to effectively identify underage drinkers likely to have alcohol use disorders. After diagnostic assessment when germane, the initial intervention typically focuses on education, motivation for change, and consideration of treatment options. Internet-accessible resources providing effective brief interventions are available, along with supplemental suggestions for parents. Recent changes in federal and commercial insurance reimbursement policies provide some fiscal support for these services, although rate increases and expanded applicability may be required to prompt the participation of many practitioners. Nevertheless, advances in clinical methods and progress on reimbursement policies have made screening and brief intervention for underage drinking more feasible in general Health Care Practice.

  • Screening and Brief Intervention for Underage Drinkers review
    2010
    Co-Authors: Duncan B. Clark, Adam J. Gordon, Lorraine Ettaro, Jill M. Owens, Howard B. Moss
    Abstract:

    In a 2007 report, the US Surgeon General called for Health Care professionals to renew efforts to reduce underage drinking. Focusing on the adolescent patient, this review provides Health Care professionals with recommendations for alcohol-related screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment. MEDLINE and published reviews were used to identify relevant literature. Several brief screening methods have been shown to effectively identify underage drinkers likely to have alcohol use disorders. After diagnostic assessment when germane, the initial interven- tion typically focuses on education, motivation for change, and consideration of treatment options. Internet-accessible resources providing effective brief interventions are available, along with supplemental suggestions for parents. Recent changes in federal and commercial insurance reimbursement policies provide some fiscal support for these services, although rate increases and ex- panded applicability may be required to prompt the participation of many practitioners. Nevertheless, advances in clinical methods and progress on reimbursement policies have made screening and brief intervention for underage drinking more feasible in general Health Care Practice.