The two questions that could determine if you have an alcohol problem

Study claims that just two simple questions could be all takes for a GP to identify potential or real alcohol abuse

Natasha Culzac
Monday 07 July 2014 10:10 EDT
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Researchers have said it could take only two questions to identify a problem with alcohol
Researchers have said it could take only two questions to identify a problem with alcohol (Reuters)

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Two questions is all it could take to establish whether a person currently suffers from or is at risk of a drink problem, a study for GPs says.

‘How often do you have six or more drinks on one occasion?’ and ‘as a result of your drinking or drug use, did anything happen in the last year that you wish didn’t happen?’ are the two enquiries a GP could make to detect hidden alcohol abuse, it claims.

Scientists from the University of Leicester, led by consultant in psycho-oncology Alex Mitchell, looked at 17 previous alcohol studies spanning 5,646 people to see whether simple preliminary screening using one or two questions could provide an accurate foundation for intervention.

The team found that the “optimal approach appears to be two questions” followed by a possible four more.

If this was completed then it “achieved an overall accuracy of 90.9 per cent and required only 3.3 questions per attendee.”

The study was published today in the British Journal of General Practice.

GPs do not currently need to screen every patient for alcohol problems, the researchers say, but should they wish to do so many of the surveys available can be as long as ten questions.

Too large a questionnaire could be a long and drawn-out task to administer to each patient.

Instead, the scientists wanted to determine whether there is room for a shorter survey to be used more widely “without sacrificing accuracy.”

If the two questions were used alone it correctly identified alcohol abuse in 87.2 per cent of cases as well as correctly identifying those who do not suffer with alcohol problems in 79.8 per cent of cases.

The extra four questions to maximise accuracy were part of the CAGE questionnaire, a “four-question survey widely used to screen for alcoholism,” which was developed by John Ewing in 1984.

The Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) uses ten questions.

The implications of concluding that two questions is all that is needed to detect alcohol abuse in a significant portion of the population means that GPs may be able to screen for problems much easier and quicker than previously thought.

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