The pursuit of evidence-based practice: Comparisons of three guidelines on psychosocial
interventions for alcohol problems
Engelsk titel: The pursuit of evidence-based practice: Comparisons of three guidelines on psychosocial
interventions for alcohol problems
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Författare:
Bergmark, Anders
;
Skogens, Lisa
;
von Greiff, Ninive
Email: lisa.skogens@socarb.su.se
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 17
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 14093561
Sammanfattning
AIMS - In this article we scrutinise three prominent guidelines on psychosocial interventions for
alcohol problems. We pay special attention to how congruent the guidelines are in terms of the
interventions recommended, and the processes used in order to identify and rank the "evidence"
underpinning these recommendations. DATA - The analysed guidelines are: 1) Practice Guideline
for the Treatment of Patients with Substance Use Disorders, American Psychiatric Association
(2006); 2) Alcohol-Use Disorders. The NICE Guideline on Diagnosis, Assessment and Management
of Harmful Drinking and Alcohol Dependence (2011), National Collaborating Centre for Mental
Health, UK; 3) Guidelines for the Treatment of Alcohol Problems, Australian Government, Department
of Health and Ageing (2009). The purpose is not to review the three guidelines as such, but to
study them as an example of the production of evidence. All report to be based on "best available
evidence", so the guidelines were compared both regarding the actual recommendations and the
guideline production procedures and differences in these procedures with related consequences.
RESULTS & CONCLUSIONS - Prestigious organisations in different national contexts have reached
divergent conclusions about evidence-based practice and the quality of the scientific studies
underpinning these conclusions. Differences in the guidelines regarding interpretations, limitations
and grading illustrate the difficulties with the dilemmas of sensitivity (to include factors that are
significant for how a psychological intervention is to be judged) and specificity (that irrelevant studies
are cleared off) in the recommendations presented.