THURSDAY 21st NOVEMBER 2024
Schedule | Location | Session |
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9:00 – 9:30 | Plenary room |
Institutional welcome:
Olga Pané (Minister of Health) Esteve Fernández (Secretary of Public Health) Joan Ramon Villalbí (Delegate of the National Plan on Drugs) Joan Colom (Subdirector General of Addictions, HIV, STI and Viral Hepatitis) |
9:30 – 10:30 | Plenary room |
Plenary Session: Bridging the gap between research, policy and practice. Carina Ferreira-Borges: WHO initiatives aimed at enhancing capacity and implementation of SBI. Jürgen Rehm: Screening and brief intervention as a health policy option. Chair: Joan Colom (Catalonia, Spain) |
11:00 – 12:15 | Plenary room |
Parallel 1: Implementation research SBI models – Chair: Pablo Norambuena, Chile 1. 12 years of a national program of brief interventions on alcohol and other drugs. Pablo Norambuena, Chile
2. Contextual factors associated with successful alcohol screening and brief intervention, implementation and sustainment in adult primary care. Stacy Sterling, USA
3. Providing information and advice in brief motivational interventions – Jacques Gaume, Switzerland
4. Changes in 5A’s Smoking Cessation Services following the Implementation of a Healthy System Project (ISCI-SEC): a Pre-Post Study. Cristina Martinez, Spain
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Room 2 |
Parallel 2: SBI on alcohol – Chair: Sven Andreasson, Sweden 1. Identification and treatment of alcohol use disorder with the 15-method in primary care. Sven Andreasson, Sweden
2. Trajectories of alcohol screening and brief intervention (aSBI) performance and their associations with Long Term Perfomance AND Alcohol Use Outcomes. Felicia Chi, USA
3. Portuguese Validated Versions of the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test: A Systematic Review. Diogo Cardoso, Portugal
4. Presentation of the Brief Guide for screening and brief intervention in risky and harmful alcohol consumption SBI in Primary Care (Spanish Society of Fmaily and Community Medicine semFYC).. Francisco Camarelles, Spain
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Room 3 |
Workshop 1: Rethinking our Ethical Obligations within SBIs. Andrew Divers, UK
Topic: Rethinking SBI/SBIRT in the context of other policy measures |
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Room 6 |
Symposium 1: Operationalising SBI for multiple lifestyle risk factors. Chair: Hugo Lopez, Spain 1. Communities of practice, working with expert stakeholders to develop networks and promote synergies wirh European Health Policy objectives –PEACH WP2. Alexandra Pinto, Portugal
2. Gaps and needs analysis for implementation strategies. Laura Perdiguero & Cristina Martínez, Spain
3. Co-creating large scale implementation strategies for specific populations. Silvia Matrai, Spain
4. Key issues in testing the feasibility of SBI for multiple lifestyle risk factors in different populations and settings. Lidia Segura & Jorge Palacio-Vieira, Spain
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12:15 – 13:30 | Plenary room |
Parallel 3: SBI in different populations – Chair: Philippa Case, UK 1. Piloting a strategy to prevent and manage alcohol-related problems in underage populations at risk in health services. Carla Bruguera, Spain
3. Alcohol brief interventions for older adults with cognitive impairment: Systematic review. Philippa Case, UK
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Room 2 |
Parallel 4: SBI on alcohol – Chair: Claudia Gandin, Italy 1. The attitudes to alcohol and alcohol risks of general practitioners according to the WHO alcohol brief intervention training manual for primary care. Claudia Gandin, Italy
3. Implementation of the AUDIT-C in the Spanish digital Medical records of Primary Care PC, availability of brochures and intervention guides in SBI, and campaigns on alcohol consumption.. Francisco Camarelles, Spain
4. Self-Reported Readiness to Change Alcohol Use in Emergency Department Patients with Alcohol Use Disorder Predicts Successful Linkage to Treatment.. Kathryn Hawk, USA
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Room 3 |
Workshop 2: Early Identification an Brief Interventions Bridging the Research to Practice Gap. Torgeir G Lid, Norway & Sebastian Potthoff, UK
Topic: Integrated SBI to tackle NCD |
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Room 6 |
Symposium 2: Effects, motivation, and machine learning in digital alcohol interventions. Chair: Anne H Berman, Sweden /Topic – Digitalization. 1. Reducing Risky Alcohol Use via Smartphone App Skills Training among Adult Internet Help-Seekers: A Double Blinded Randomized Controlled Trial. Anne H Berman, Sweden
2. Investigating Spill-over effects of computer-based and in-person brief alcohol interventions on other behavioral health risk factors. Jennis Freyer-Adam, Germany
3. Predicting non-response and low adherence in online treatment for alcohol problems using Natural Language Processing and supervised machine learning. Magnus Johansson, Sweden
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14:00 – 14:30 | Screen 1 – next to plenary room |
Poster session 1: Digitalization (6) – Chair: Graciela Sánchez Hernández, México 1. Development of a motivational chatbot to screen and deliver brief advice for risky alcohol consumption. Graciela Sánchez Hernández, México
2. Systematic review & meta-analysis of RDoC behavioral paradigms for positive valence, negative valence, and cognitive domains across depressive, bipolar, anxiety, and substance use disorders. Joao Vissoci, USA
3. Effectiveness of web personalised feedback interventions for reducing alcohol use among university students: a meta-analysis. Maria Pueyo Garrigues, Spain
4. Quality of the therapeutic relationship and sybchrony in therapist´s and patient´s vocally encoded arousal. Stéphanie Blanc Perler, Switzerland
5. Acceptability and Applicability of app TrIE-AD” in the screening of Brazilian Youth substance use followed by guided Brief Intervention. Malu Formigoni, Brazil
6. Use of electronic nicotine delivery systems among primary care patients in a large urban health system: polytobacco product use and cannabis co-use patterns. Lilian Gerber, USA
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Screen 2 – next to room 4 |
Poster session 2: Implementation research SBI models and integrated SBI to tackle NCD – Chair: Hannah Walsh, UK 1. Characterization of Brazilian theses and dissertations that used brief intervention for alcohol use. Divane De Vargas, Brazil
2. A mixed method study exploring similarities and differences in general and social services-specific barriers to treatment-seeking among individuals with a problematic use of alcohol, cannabis, or gambling. Greta Schettini, Sweden
3. The “Co-Use Wheel”: Developing a tool to supportscreening, assesment and interventions for tobacco and cànnabis. Hannah Walsh, UK
4. Construction of a brief intervention protocol to reduce risky alcohol consumption in elderly people receiving care in Primary Health Care. Deivson Lima, Brazil
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14:30 – 16:00 | Plenary room |
Plenary session: 20 years of INEBRIA. Looking forward to the future Speakers: Peter Anderson (former INEBRIA President, UK), Nick Heather (Northumbria University, UK), Jim McCambridge (UCL, London, UK), Sven Andreasson (Karolinska institutet, Sweden), Dorothy Newbury-Birch (Professor of Social Justice and Public Policy, School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Law, Teesside University, UK), Malu Formigoni (Universidade Federal de Sao Paulo, Brazil), Jeremy Bray (UNC Greensboro, USA) Chair: Antoni Gual (Hospital Clínic, Spain) |
16:15 – 17:30 | Plenary room |
Workshop 3: SBIRT-Plus and the SAFER way to population health
Tom Babor, USA |
Room 2 |
Parallel 5: SBI other substances Chair: Jennifer McNeely, UK 1. A systematic review of the effectiveness of brief interventions for reducing illicit substance use in various settings. Dorothy Newbury-Birch, UK
2. Overlap of Cannabis Use with Depression and Anxiety Disorders among Primary Care Patients in a Large Health System in Los Angeles, California Lillian Gelberg, USA
4. Acute care utilization after peer recovery coach-delivered brief intervention in hospital emergency departments: Evaluation of the Reverse the Cycle program. Courtney Nordeck, USA
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Room 3 |
Workshop 4: Recruitment and retention of real and reliable participants in remote studies
Marcus Bendtsen, Sweden Topic: Digitalization |
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Room 6 |
Symposium 3: Population-based alcohol screening and assessment. Kevin Hallgren, USA / Topic – Implementation research SBI models Chair: Kevin Hallgren, USA 1. Are alcohol screening and AUD symptom assessment measures reliable when completed in routine primary care? Kevin Hallgren, USA
2. Do providers equitably diagnose AUD across sex, race, and ethnicity? Using the AUDIT-C and Alcohol Symptom Checklist to better understand potential biases in AUD diagnosing. Robert Ellis, USA
3. Do brief alcohol screening and follow-up assessment measures completed in routine care provide information about future health risks and service utilization? Theresa E Matson, USA
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FRIDAY 22ND NOVEMBER 2024
Schedule | Location | Session |
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9:00 – 10:15 | Plenary room |
Parallel 6: Digitalization – Chair: Joel Crawford, Sweden 1. Effects of a waiting list control design on alcohol consumption among online help-seekers: a randomised controlled trial. Katarina Ulfsdotter Gunnarsson, Sweden
4. Reimagining Global Mental Health: The Alcohol Use Behavioral Phenotyping Test in Global Populations. Joao Ricardo Vissoci
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Room 2 |
Parallel 7: Integrated SBI to tackle NCD – Chair: Sara Wallhed Finn, Sweden 1. Alcohol consumption in patients with hypertension in primary care –a comparison of Phosphatidylethanol and AUDIT. Åsa Thurfjell, Sweden
2. “SumaSalut”: Integrating early detection of NCD risk factors into primary health care in Catalonia. Carla Bruguera, Spain
4. Brief interventions for alcohol as part of national prevention program in primary care in the Russian Federation – a qualitative study with patients and healthcare providers. Marina Vetrova, WHO
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Room 3 |
Workshop 5: Perspectives on the design and implementation of a digital alcohol screening and brief interventions tool for workplaces.
Facilitators: Lolita Alfred, Britta Jacobsen & Francisca Pulido Valiente, WHO-Euro |
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Room 5 |
Symposium 4: Brief Intervention Program for Adolescents in Mexico: 20 years of collaborations. Chair: Eunice Vargas, México 2. Has PIBA always been the same? Adaptation and reinvention process. Eunice Vargas, México
3. PIBA and public policy: successes, changes and challenges in implementation. Eunice Vargas, México
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Room 6 |
Workshop 6: What could the next twenty years of brief intervention research in the context of other alcohol policy measures look like? Part I.
Jim McCambrige, UK Topic – Rethinking SBI/SBIRT in the context of other policy measures |
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10:45 – 11:45 | Plenary room |
Nick Heather Lecture: Celebrating 20 years of INEBRIA Thanksgiving – Joan Colom – Subdirector General of Addictions, HIV, STI and Viral Hepatitis, Public Health Agency, Government of Catalonia Chair: Dorothy Newbury-Birch, UK & Malu Formigoni, Brazil |
12:15 – 12:45 | Screen 2 – next to room 4 |
Poster session 3: Rethinking SBI/SBIRT in the context of other policy measures and SBI for behavioural addictions Chair: Philip Lindner, Sweden 2. Using National Policy and a Partnership Approach to reorientate Community-based Alcohol Services to Provide EBI in Primary Care Settings, Promoting Early Identifications. Karen Reid, Ireland
3. Exploring the Mediating Effects of Depression on the Effectiveness of a Brief Negotiational Intervention in Reducing Harmful Alcohol Use in Moshi, Tanzania: A Mixed Method Study. Joao Vissoci, USA
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13:15 – 13:45 | Screen 1 – next to plenary room |
Poster session 4: Joining forces towards scaling up SBI in health and other settings (workplace, justice) in different population groups (youth, pregnant women, etc) Chair: Clara Oliveras, Spain 1.My way up: combining a brief intervention with a serious game to improve treatment retention in patients with alcohol-associated liver disease. Results from the efficacy randomised controlled trial. Clara Oliveras, Spain
2. .: The intersection of Race and Ethnicity and residential rurality in treatment for alcohol use disorder. Alyssa Halbissen, USA
4. Assessing if drinking motives-based vignettes influence the decision to drink and alcohol cues, Joel Crawford, Sweden
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13:15 – 13:45 | Screen 2 – next to room 4 |
Poster session 5: SBI training and mentoring initiatives Chair: Kirk von Sternberg, USA 1. Training Social Workers in the Delivery of Screening and Brief Intervention to Reduce the Risk of Substance-Exposed Pregnancies. Kirk von Sternberg, USA
2. The development of a training and supervision programme on the SAOR EBI model for community-based drug & alcohol workers. James O’Shea, Ireland
3. Adaptation of a SBIRT training session on tobacco use to e-learning format. Marianne Hochet, France
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13:45 – 14:45 | Plenary room |
Plenary session: Expanding the reach of alcohol brief intervention around the world Speakers: Abhijit Nadkarni (India), David Kalema and Kenneth Kalani (Uganda), Orla Fagan (Ireland), Divane de Vargas (South America), Svetlana Shport (Russian Federation) Chair: Jeremy Bray, USA |
14:45 – 15:30 | Plenary room |
Plenary session: Richard Saitz Award – Mentoring and being Mentored: Engagement and Empowerment Speaker: Richard Velleman – Emeritus Professor of Mental Health Research, University of Bath / Co-Director, Addictions and related Research Group, Sangath Community Health NGO, Goa, India / Trustee and Treasurer, AFINet (Addiction and the Family International Network) Chair: Jennifer McNeely, USA This presentation will describe what I mean by ‘mentoring’, and then describe what I think are the two key elements in my sort of mentoring: Engagement and Empowerment. The remainder of the presentation will look back over my career, and reflect on how these elements have shaped my approach to mentoring, focusing on the three places and time periods of Exeter (1977-1983), Bath (1984-2011) and India and Internationally (2011-2024), and some of the people who I have mentored in those periods. |
15:45 – 17:00 | Plenary room |
Parallel 8: Digitalization – Chair: Hugo López, Spain 2. Effectiveness os Digital Screening and Brief Intervention for Alcohol Misue Among College Students in India a Cluster RCT. Abhishek Ghosh
3. Does the inclusion of synchronous human-led online guidance enhance adherence and effectiveness of digital intervention for alcohol consumption reduction? Malu Formigoni, Brazil
4. Increased adherence to an online intervention to reduce alcohol consumption in Mexico and Brazil. Marcela Tiburcio, México
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Room 2 |
Symposium 5: Tailoring the implementation of screening and brief interventions in primary health care settings: new strategies and new approaches for brief interventions – Chair: Divane De Vargas, Brazil 1. Brief intervention protocol delivered by nurses by phone to patients with harmful alcohol use: a feasibility trial. Ana Vitoria Correa Lima, Brazil
2. Nurse’s perception when delivering Brief Intervention by telephone for people with risky or harmful alcohol use. Ana Vitoria Correa Lima, Brazil
3. Optmizing a Brief Intervention delivery: A new proposal to PHC. Erika Gisseth León Ramírez, Brazil
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Room 3 |
Parallel 9: SBI training and mentoring initiatives – Chair: Francisco Camarelles, Spain 1. The development of a training and supervision programme on the SAOR EBI model for community-based drug & alcohol workers. James O’Shea, Ireland
2. Evaluation and aspects more valued in the alcohol SBI-on-line training course for PHC: “Mójate con el alcohol”. Inés Zuza Santacilia, Spain
3. Aspects most valued in an online training course in screening and brief intervention SBI in risky and harmful alcohol consumption” Mójate con el alcohol” (Get involved in addressing alcohol consumption). Soledad Justo Gil, Spain
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Room 5 |
Symposium 6: Expanding the impact and reach of SBI in primary care to address a broader range of patients needing care – Chair: Stacy Sterling, USA 1. Primary care team perspectives on the expansion of OUD treatment via the Collaborative Care Model. Elisabeth Austin, USA
2. Development of a decision aid for alcohol use disorders (AUD) to be tested in a pragmatic trial of shared decision-making for AUD in primary care. Gwen Lapham, USA
3. Alcohol Telemedicine Consultation in Primary Care: Increasing Access to Pharmacotherapy and Specialty Treatment for Alcohol Problems. Stacy Sterling, USA
4. Alcohol Telemedicine Consultation (ATC): Primary Care Provider Perspectives. Amy Leibowitz, USA
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Room 6 |
Workshop 7: What could the next twenty years of brief intervention research in the context of other alcohol policy measures look like? Part II.
Jim McCambrige, UK Topic: Rethinking SBI/SBIRT in the context of other policy measures |