A workplace intervention to reduce alcohol and drug consumption: a nonrandomized single-group study

BackgroundThe consumption of alcohol and other drugs causes social and health problems in industrialized societies. Furthermore, alcohol and drug consumption in the workplace is associated with work accidents, absenteeism and low productivity. The aim of the current study is to reduce alcohol and drug consumption among workers in the service industry and, as a secondary aim, to improve their healthy habits through the reduction of alcohol and other drug consumption in their leisure time.MethodsThis nonrandomized, single-group study was conducted in 12 work centers. The intervention began in 2009 and emphasized 1) health promotion and health monitoring, which included a) alcohol and drug awareness and b) the evaluation and monitoring of alcohol and drug consumption through a semistructured interview designed to assess risky consumption; urine tests aimed at detecting alcohol, cannabis and cocaine use; an Alcotest based on expired air to test for the recent consumption of alcohol and a saliva exam to test for the recent consumption of six drugs; and 2) secondary prevention if risky consumption was identified. Risky alcohol consumption was defined as the ingestion of more than 28 standard drink units (SDUs)/week among men and more than 17 SDUs/week among women (taking into account both work and leisure time). Drug consumption was considered risky consumption.ResultsA total of 1103 workers participated, and each received 5 h of awareness training. Those who presented with risky consumption received secondary prevention training. The prevalence of risky alcohol consumption decreased by 4.1% (baseline: 14.7% reduced to 10.6% in the first year; p = 0.001), a reduction that was maintained over a 3-year follow-up period.ConclusionA comprehensive program of worker health surveillance that involves stakeholders and includes monitoring can be a means of potentially improving compliance with workplace promotion programs, resulting in the facilitation of such beneficial, desired behavior change in areas such as alcohol and drug consumption.

[1]  EdAl-2 (Educació en Alimentació) programme: reproducibility of a cluster randomised, interventional, primary-school-based study to induce healthier lifestyle activities in children , 2014, BMJ Open.

[2]  J. Verbeek,et al.  Alcohol and drug screening of occupational drivers for preventing injury. , 2009, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[3]  J. Bennett,et al.  Prevention Interventions of Alcohol Problems in the Workplace , 2011, Alcohol research & health : the journal of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

[4]  C. O. Dorrego Drogodependencias en el lugar de trabajo: Pautas generales de intervención desde la medicina del trabajo , 2011 .

[5]  J. Rehm,et al.  Alcohol Consumption, Alcohol Dependence and Attributable Burden of Disease in Europe: Potential Gains From Effective Interventions for Alcohol Dependence: (506502014-001) , 2012 .

[6]  A. Helander,et al.  Screening and brief intervention for risky alcohol consumption in the workplace: results of a 1-year randomized controlled study. , 2010, Alcohol and alcoholism.

[7]  T. Lancaster,et al.  Workplace interventions for smoking cessation. , 2014, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[8]  T. Lohman,et al.  Anthropometric Standardization Reference Manual , 1988 .

[9]  J. Rehm,et al.  Alcohol and Mortality , 2014, Alcohol Research : Current Reviews.

[10]  J. Bobes,et al.  Suicide, unemployment, and economic recession in Spain , 2017 .

[11]  Á. Barco,et al.  Abuso de alcohol en el medio laboral, factores de riesgo para el consumo, e instrumentos de valoración aplicables en la vigilancia de la salud , 2011 .

[12]  Dan J Stein,et al.  Alcohol use and burden for 195 countries and territories, 1990–2016: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016 , 2018, Lancet.

[13]  R. Sanson-Fisher,et al.  A systematic review of work-place interventions for alcohol-related problems. , 2009, Addiction.

[14]  T. Lancaster,et al.  Workplace interventions for smoking cessation. , 2014, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[15]  Trudy van der Weijden,et al.  Block design allowed for control of the Hawthorne effect in a randomized controlled trial of test ordering. , 2004, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[16]  Cynthia J. Sieck,et al.  Focusing Attention on Substance Abuse in the Workplace: A Comparison of Three Workplace Interventions , 2010 .

[17]  David Moriña,et al.  A primary-school-based study to reduce the prevalence of childhood obesity – the EdAl (Educació en Alimentació) study: a randomized controlled trial , 2014, Trials.

[18]  A. G. Solé,et al.  La «unidad de bebida estándar» como registro simplificado del consumo de bebidas alcohólicas y su determinación en España , 1999 .

[19]  E. O. Mangado,et al.  Consumo de alcohol y otras drogas en el medio laboral , 2008 .