Alcohol and Alcoholism Vol. 35, No. 1, pp. 16-24, 2000
© 2000 Medical Council on Alcoholism
Invited Special Articles
SCIENCE, PRACTICE AND PATIENT NEEDS: THE WORK OF THE PLINIUS MAIOR SOCIETY
Secretary, the Plinius Maior Society, 146 Avenue Brugmann, B-1060 Brussels, Belgium
Received 10 June 1999; first review notified 4 October 1999
ABSTRACT
The Plinius Maior Society is a European multinational, multidisciplinary group of clinicians and researchers in the alcoholism field, which strives for a comprehensive care concept in the management of alcoholism and alcohol-related problems. The Society, using evidence-based medicine, has developed a set of protocols, in the forms of guidelines, flow-charts, leaflets and booklets, for use as tools in research on and treatment of alcohol dependence, with a view to standardize clinical research procedures and to bridge the gap between the alcoholism researcher, practitioner and patient. These protocols or tools have been subjected to a review process during their preparation, and further comments on their validity will be integrated in their updates. Seven protocols have so far been developed, two of which, Guidelines on Evaluation of Treatment of Alcohol Dependence and Detection and Management of Patients with Psychiatric and Alcohol Use Disorders, are aimed at the clinical researcher and specialists, whereas three others [in the form of decision trees (flow-charts)] are aimed at the general practitioner and other primary health care providers. These are entitled Alcohol Risk Assessment and Intervention in Primary Care, Withdrawal from Alcohol at Home and Brief Intervention in Patients with Alcohol-Related Problems. The remaining two tools are booklets aimed at the patient, one to support initiatives for detection of drinking problems and primary intervention, namely Do you have this Problem? Discuss it with your Doctor!, and the other to assist the patient in relapse prevention after the early stages of treatment, namely On the Way to Recovery. The protocols for the general practitioners and patients have so far been produced in seven European languages, and, as with the Guidelines, feedback from target users will be collected and incorporated in future updates. The Society continually seeks to consider areas of clinical importance for its work and, as it enters the new millennium, it hopes to address and make a significant contribution to the most pressing problem in the management of alcohol dependence, namely relapse.
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