Training primary health care providers in Colombia, Mexico and Peru to increase alcohol screening: Mixed-methods process evaluation of implementation strategy.
Daša KokoleEva Jané-LlopisGuillermina Natera ReyNatalia Bautista AguilarPerla Sonia Medina AguilarJuliana Mejía-TrujilloKatherine MoraNatalia RestrepoInes BustamanteMarina PiazzaAmy O'DonnellAdriana SoloveiLiesbeth MerckenChristiane Sybille SchmidtHugo Lopez-PelayoSilvia MatraiFleur BraddickAntoni GualJürgen RehmPeter AndersonHein de VriesPublished in: Implementation research and practice (2022)
Primary health care providers can play an important role in detecting heavy drinkers among their consulting patients, and training can be an effective implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening and detection. Existing training literature predominantly focuses on evaluating trainings in high-income countries, or evaluating their effectiveness rather than implementation. As part of SCALA (Scale-up of Prevention and Management of Alcohol Use Disorders in Latin America) study, we evaluated training as implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening in primary health care in a middle-income context. Overall, 72.3% of eligible providers attended the training and 49% of training attendees conducted alcohol screening in practice after attending the training. Our process evaluation suggests that simple intervention with sufficient time to practice, adapted to limited provider availability, is optimal to balance training feasibility and effectiveness; that booster sessions are especially important in context with lower organizational or structural support; and that ongoing training refinement during the implementation period is necessary.