Brief intervention may stop drunk drivers


MONTREAL, Nov 25, 2009 (UPI via COMTEX) -- A brief intervention may help even
those called "hard core drunk drivers," Canadian and U.S. researchers said.

Thomas Brown of McGill University in Montreal and U.S. colleagues found a
psychosocial intervention called brief motivational interviewing helped people
change harmful drinking patterns.

The researchers followed up after six and 12 months, after dividing 184
recidivists with currently untreated drinking problems into two groups.

The first group -- 86 men and 6 women -- received a brief motivational
interviewing session lasting 30 minutes that sought to look at how the study
participant's harmful alcohol use was at odds with his or her self-image. The
second group -- 79 men and 13 women -- received a 30-minute "control"
intervention consisting of general information on the hazards of excessive
drinking.

"Our results indicated that, compared to the control procedure, the behavioral
motivation interview was superior in reducing by around 30 percent the number of
risky drinking days for up to a year after receiving the intervention," Brown
said in a statement.

A risky drinking day was one on which the study participant drank enough that he
or she would be impaired if they were to drive.

The findings are scheduled to be published in Alcoholism: Clinical &
Experimental Research in February.



URL: www.upi.com


Copyright 2009 by United Press International

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