Screening for Alcohol Use and Brief Counseling of Adults — 13 States and the District of Columbia, 2017

Lela R. McKnight-Eily, PhD1; Catherine A. Okoro, PhD2; Khadija Turay, PhD3; Cristian Acero, MPH1; Dan Hungerford, DrPH1 (View author affiliations)

View suggested citation

Summary

What is already known about this topic?

Binge drinking increases the risk for adverse health conditions and death. Alcohol screening and brief intervention (SBI), recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) for all adults in primary care, is effective in reducing binge drinking.

What is added by this report?

In 2017, 81% of survey respondents were asked by their health care provider about alcohol consumption and 38% about binge drinking at a checkup in the past 2 years. Among those asked about alcohol use and who reported current binge drinking, 80% received no advice to reduce their drinking.

What are the implications for public health practice?

Implementation of alcohol SBI as recommended by USPSTF, coupled with population-level evidence-based interventions, can reduce binge drinking among U.S. adults.

Article Metrics
Altmetric:
Citations:
Views:

Views equals page views plus PDF downloads

Related Materials

Binge drinking* is a leading preventable public health problem. From 2006 to 2010, binge drinking contributed to approximately 49,000 annual deaths resulting from acute conditions (e.g., injuries and violence) (1). Binge drinking also increases the risk for adverse health conditions, including some chronic diseases (e.g., breast cancer) and fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (2). In 2004, 2013, and again in 2018, for all U.S. adults aged ≥18 years in primary care, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommended alcohol screening and brief intervention (alcohol SBI) or counseling for persons whose screening indicated drinking in excess of recommended limits or in ways that increase risk for poor health outcomes (35). However, previous CDC surveillance data indicate that patients report rarely talking to their provider about alcohol use, and alcohol SBI is traditionally delivered through conversation. CDC recently analyzed 2017 data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) survey’s five-question module, which asked adults in 13 states§ and the District of Columbia (DC) about the delivery of alcohol SBI during their most recent checkup in the past 2 years. Overall, 81.4% of adults (age-standardized estimate) reported being asked about alcohol use by a health professional in person or on a form during a checkup in the past 2 years, but only 37.8% reported being asked a question about binge-level alcohol consumption, which is included on USPSTF recommended instruments (3). Among module respondents who were asked about alcohol use at a checkup in the past 2 years and reported current binge drinking (past 30 days) at time of survey, only 41.7% were advised about the harms of drinking too much at a checkup in the past 2 years, and only 20.1% were advised to reduce or quit drinking at a checkup in the past 2 years. These findings suggest that missed opportunities remain for health care providers to intervene with patients who report binge drinking. Working to implement alcohol SBI at a systems level, including the provision of the new Healthcare Effectiveness Data Information Set (HEDIS) measure, Unhealthy Alcohol Use Screening and Follow-Up, can improve alcohol SBI’s use and benefit in primary care.

BRFSS is an ongoing state-based, random-digit–dialed telephone survey of the noninstitutionalized U.S. adult population aged ≥18 years in all 50 states, DC, and participating U.S. territories. Information is collected on various health conditions, health practices, and risk behaviors, including alcohol use. CDC analyzed 2017 data from the 13 states and DC that administered an optional alcohol SBI module. All BRFSS respondents are asked about the timing of their last routine checkup. Those who had a checkup in the past 2 years were asked alcohol SBI module questions. All module respondents were asked four questions: 1) “You told me earlier that your last routine checkup was [within the past year/within the past 2 years]. At that checkup, were you asked in person or on a form if you drink alcohol?”; 2) “Did the health care provider ask you in person or on a form how much you drink?”; 3) “Did the health care provider specifically ask whether you drank (5 for men/4 for women) or more alcoholic drinks on an occasion?”; and 4) “Were you offered advice about what level of drinking is harmful or risky for your health?” Persons who responded affirmatively to any of the first three questions (alcohol use screening–related) were also asked “Healthcare providers may also advise patients to drink less for various reasons. At your last routine checkup, were you advised to reduce or quit your drinking?” to assess brief counseling. BRFSS assesses current binge drinking by report of drinking four (women) or five (men) or more drinks on one or more occasions during the past 30 days.

Analyses were conducted to account for BRFSS’s complex sampling design. Weighted crude and age-standardized prevalence estimates of responses to alcohol SBI module questions were calculated. Estimates were stratified by demographic characteristics and selected drinking patterns. Subanalyses were performed among alcohol SBI module respondents who indicated that they had been asked at least one of three alcohol use screening–related questions in the past 2 years and who reported current binge drinking (in the past 30 days) at time of survey. Only age-standardized estimates are included in the text of this report. Wald chi-squared tests were used to determine significant within-group differences. SUDAAN (version 11.0.3; RTI International) was used for analyses. Only significant differences are reported. The median cooperation rate** for the 14 sites was 71.7%, and median response rate was 43.8%.

Overall, 81.4% of module respondents indicated being asked by their health care provider about alcohol use in person or by form, 71.8% reported being asked how much they drink, and 37.8% reported being asked about binge drinking (Table 1). The prevalence of module respondents being asked about binge drinking was higher among males (40.1%) and persons with less than a high school diploma (46.2%) than among females (36.0%) and persons with higher levels of education (36.1% [college or technical school] to 37.1% [high school diploma]). A higher percentage of persons with a household income <200% of the federal poverty level were asked about binge drinking than were persons with an income ≥200% of the federal poverty level. Hispanic adults reported being asked about binge drinking more than other racial/ethnic groups. Prevalence of being asked about binge drinking was also higher among module respondents who reported binge drinking (47.3%) than among those who did not (36.1%).

Among module respondents who were asked at least one of the alcohol use screening–related questions at a checkup in the past 2 years and reported current binge drinking (past 30 days) at time of survey, only 41.7% were advised about the harms of drinking too much at a checkup in the past 2 years, and only 20.1% were advised to reduce or quit drinking at a checkup in the past 2 years (Table 2). Among module respondents who were asked at least one of the alcohol use screening–related questions and reported current binge drinking in the past 30 days at time of survey, the prevalence of being advised to reduce drinking at a checkup in the past 2 years was higher among males (24.1%), persons with a disability (28.2%), persons with less than a high school education (38.2%), persons with income <100% of the federal poverty level (37.5%), and those without health insurance coverage (36.2%) than among their counterparts. Prevalence was also higher among Hispanic adults (28.5%) than among white adults (16.8%).

Discussion

In 2017, although 81% of U.S. adults reported being asked by their health care provider about alcohol use, only 38% reported being asked about binge drinking during a checkup in the past 2 years, based on BRFSS data from 13 states and DC. Fewer than half (42%) of module respondents who were asked about alcohol use at a checkup in the past 2 years and reported current binge drinking (past 30 days) at time of survey were advised of harmful drinking levels; almost 80% (four of five persons) received no advice to reduce their drinking (only 20% were advised to reduce their drinking). Previous overall 2014 estimates, using the BRFSS alcohol SBI module from 17 states and DC (6), were similar to overall 2017 findings, but not directly comparable because of differences in states repeating the module in 2014 and 2017 (only five states implemented the module both years). State-level trend analysis might occur in future reports. An assessment of binge-level consumption is included on USPSTF-recommended screening tools (5).

Screening alone is not effective at reducing binge drinking (5). Brief counseling involves feedback based on screening results, a conversation about the dangers of excessive drinking on the patient’s health, and development of a plan to reduce drinking if the patient chooses to do so (5,7). Behavioral counseling is a necessary component of alcohol SBI for reduction in consumption and adherence to drinking limits (5). Persons with dependence are to be referred to treatment, but referral might not occur, or patients might not accept the referral, obtain treatment, or respond to treatment (5,7). The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, which has long promoted SBI through grant programs, has a treatment locator†† to assist with the referral process. A 2018 USPSTF review found that “Among adults identified through screening, counseling interventions to reduce unhealthy alcohol use were associated with reductions in alcohol use (by a mean of 1.6 drinks/wk) and in the odds of exceeding recommended drinking limits (by 40%) and heavy use episodes (by 33%) at 6 to 12 months of follow-up….Among pregnant women, counseling interventions were associated with an odds ratio of 2.26 for remaining abstinent from alcohol during pregnancy.” (5).

The demographic differences in this report might be a consequence of some adults having more contact with health systems, such as those with a disability (8) or veterans, which could increase their likelihood of receipt of alcohol SBI. In addition, screening practices might vary in health care systems that have systematically implemented alcohol SBI (e.g., U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and federally qualified health centers) (9).

Health system changes, such as the acceptance of a new 2018 HEDIS measure: Unhealthy Alcohol Use Screening and Follow-Up,§§ might increase the provision of alcohol SBI. Further, federal agencies have promoted broad implementation of alcohol SBI, including CDC’s funding initiatives to organizations working on fetal alcohol spectrum disorder,¶¶ the development of training and implementation resources,*** and cross-agency, medical, and private sector partnerships.

The 2015–2020 Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommends that if alcohol is consumed, it should be in moderation (up to one drink a day for women, two for men) and only by adults of legal drinking age.††† The 2015–2020 Dietary Guidelines for Americans and the National Institute for Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism also indicate or advise that some persons should not drink alcohol at all, including pregnant women (10) or those who might be pregnant or persons who have certain medical conditions or are taking medications that can interact with alcohol (10).

The findings in this report are subject to at least four limitations. First, BRFSS data are self-reported, which can result in recall and social desirability biases around the period of recall for the checkup. Second, data in this report were from 14 sites, and thus, these results cannot be used to estimate the prevalence of alcohol SBI across all states and territories. Third, although respondents indicated current binge drinking in response to a BRFSS survey question, whether they reported binge drinking to their health care provider at time of checkup in the past 2 years is unknown; many respondents reported not being asked about binge drinking at a checkup in the past 2 years. Finally, the survey median response rate was only 43.8%, which increases the possibility of response bias.

Binge drinking among U.S. adults continues to be a leading preventable cause of considerable morbidity and mortality (1). Alcohol SBI is an effective clinical preventive service for reducing excess alcohol use,§§§ including binge consumption (3,5,7). This report suggests that alcohol SBI is not being fully implemented as recommended. If alcohol SBI is implemented as recommended by USPSTF (3,5,7) and coupled with population-level interventions recommended by the U.S. Community Preventive Services Task Force for the prevention of excessive drinking (e.g., increasing alcohol taxes and regulating alcohol outlet density¶¶¶), an opportunity exists to also reduce alcohol-related morbidity and mortality. Working to implement alcohol SBI at a systems level, including the provision of the new HEDIS measure, Unhealthy Alcohol Use Screening and Follow-Up, can improve alcohol SBI’s use and benefit in primary care.

Acknowledgments

Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System state coordinators from the states of Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Kansas, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia; William Garvin, Machell Town, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, CDC; Pat Santora, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration; Doug Kanovsky, Junqing Liu, Fern McCree, Sarah H. Scholle, National Committee for Quality Assurance.

Corresponding author: Lela R. McKnight-Eily, LMcKnightEily@cdc.gov, 404-498-2401.


1Division of Birth Defects and Infant Disorders, National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities, CDC; 2Division of Human Development and Disability, National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities, CDC; 3Office of the Director, National Center on Emerging Zoonotic and Infectious Diseases, CDC.

All authors have completed and submitted the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors form for disclosure of potential conflicts of interest. No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.


* The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism defines binge drinking as a pattern of drinking that brings blood alcohol concentration levels to 0.08 g/dL. This typically occurs after four drinks for women and five drinks for men, in about 2 hours. https://pubs.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/Newsletter/winter2004/Newsletter_Number3.pdf.

https://www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/alcohol-screening-counseling/index.html.

§ Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Kansas, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, Tennessee, and Wisconsin.

The module lead-in question was “Healthcare providers may ask during routine checkups about behaviors like alcohol use, whether you drink or not. We want to know about their questions.”

** The cooperation rate is the number of complete and partial complete interviews divided by the number of contacted and eligible respondents.

†† https://findtreatment.samhsa.gov/.

§§ The 2018 Healthcare Effectiveness Data Information Set (HEDIS) measure, Unhealthy Alcohol Use Screening and Follow-Up, was approved as a first-year measure in June 2017 by the National Committee for Quality Assurance as a 2018 HEDIS measure. The testing and submission of this measure into HEDIS was supported by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. The measure uses standardized tools for alcohol SBI and for those who screen positive, the percentage who receive brief counseling or other follow-up within 2 months of the positive screen is documented. https://www.ncqa.org/hedis/reports-and-research/hedis-measure-unhealthy-alcohol-use-screening-and-follow-up/.

¶¶ https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/fasd/alcohol-screening.html.

*** https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/fasd/documents/alcoholsbiimplementationguide.pdf.

††† https://health.gov/dietaryguidelines/2015/.

§§§ https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/fact-sheets/binge-drinking.htm.

¶¶¶ https://www.thecommunityguide.org/topic/excessive-alcohol-consumption.

References

  1. Stahre M, Roeber J, Kanny D, Brewer RD, Zhang X. Contribution of excessive alcohol consumption to deaths and years of potential life lost in the United States. Prev Chronic Dis 2014;11:E109. CrossRef PubMed
  2. World Health Organization. Global status report on alcohol and health 2018. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization; 2018. https://www.who.int/substance_abuse/publications/global_alcohol_report/en/
  3. Curry SJ, Krist AH, Owens DK, et al.; US Preventive Services Task Force. Screening and behavioral counseling interventions to reduce unhealthy alcohol use in adolescents and adults: US Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. JAMA 2018;320:1899–909. CrossRef PubMed
  4. Bazzi A, Saitz R. Screening for unhealthy alcohol use. JAMA 2018;320:1869–71. CrossRef PubMed
  5. O’Connor EA, Perdue LA, Senger CA, et al. Screening and behavioral counseling interventions to reduce unhealthy alcohol use in adolescents and adults: updated evidence report and systematic review for the US Preventive Services Task Force. JAMA 2018;320:1910–28. CrossRef PubMed
  6. McKnight-Eily LR, Okoro CA, Mejia R, et al. Screening for excessive alcohol use and brief counseling of adults—17 states and the District of Columbia, 2014. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2017;66:313–9. CrossRef PubMed
  7. Jonas DE, Garbutt JC, Brown JM, et al. Screening, behavioral counseling, and referral in primary care to reduce alcohol misuse. AHRQ report no. 12–EHC055-EF. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; 2012. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22876371-screening-behavioral-counseling-and-referral-in-primary-care-to-reduce-alcohol-misuse-internet/
  8. Froehlich-Grobe K, Jones D, Businelle MS, Kendzor DE, Balasubramanian BA. Impact of disability and chronic conditions on health. Disabil Health J 2016;9:600–8. CrossRef PubMed
  9. Goplerud E, McPherson TL. Implementation barriers to and facilitators of screening, brief intervention, referral, and treatment (SBIRT) in federally qualified health centers (FQHCs). Chicago, IL: NORC at the University of Chicago, 2015. https://aspe.hhs.gov/report/implementation-barriers-and-facilitators-screening-brief-intervention-referral-and-treatment-sbirt-federally-qualified-health-centers-fqhcs
  10. National Institutes of Health; National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. Helping patients who drink too much: a clinician’s guide. Bethesda, MD: US Department of Health and Human Services; 2005. https://www.integration.samhsa.gov/clinical-practice/Helping_Patients_Who_Drink_Too_Much.pdf
TABLE 1. Weighted crude and age-standardized* percentages of U.S. adults who reported being asked an alcohol use screening–related question by a health care provider at last routine checkup in the past 2 years — Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 13 states and the District of Columbia, 2017Return to your place in the text
Characteristic Asked about alcohol use
(affirmative to question 1)
Asked how much alcohol
(affirmative to question 2)
Asked about binge drinking
(affirmative to question 3)
Sample size Crude %
(95% CI)
Age-standardized %
(95% CI)
Sample size Crude %
(95% CI)
Age-standardized % (95% CI) Sample size Crude %
(95% CI)
Age-standardized %
(95% CI)
Total 65,887 79.7 (79.0–80.5) 81.4 (80.7–82.1) 65,913 70.0 (69.2–70.8) 71.8 (70.9–72.6) 59,215 35.7 (34.8–36.6) 37.8 (36.9–38.8)
Sex
Male 27,725 79.7 (78.6–80.8) 81.0 (79.9–82.1) 27,663 70.1 (68.9–71.3) 71.5 (70.3–72.7) 24,942 37.9 (36.6–39.3) 40.1 (38.6–41.5)
Female 38,114 79.7 (78.7–80.7) 81.8 (80.9–82.7) 38,200 69.9 (68.8–71.0) 72.2 (71.0–73.3) 34,223 33.8 (32.5–35.0) 36.0 (34.6–37.3)
Age group (yrs)
18–24 3,018 82.3 (79.7–84.7) 2,953 65.5 (62.3–68.5) 2,750 30.6 (27.7–33.6)
25–34 5,122 88.7 (86.9–90.3) 5,032 80.9 (78.7–82.9) 4,385 48.9 (46.2–51.7)
35–44 6,867 86.7 (85.1–88.2) 6,785 79.2 (77.1–81.1) 5,713 45.7 (43.2–48.3)
45–64 25,175 80.6 (79.4–81.8) 24,982 71.8 (70.4–73.1) 21,977 35.9 (34.4–37.3)
≥65 25,705 67.3 (65.7–68.9) 26,161 57.4 (55.8–58.9) 24,390 24.8 (23.4–26.3)
Race/Ethnicity§
White 49,451 79.9 (79.1–80.6) 83.2 (82.5–84.0) 49,605 71.6 (70.8–72.4) 75.2 (74.3–76.1) 43,948 31.6 (30.6–32.5) 35.7 (34.5–36.9)
Black 5,993 76.2 (73.3–78.8) 77.2 (74.7–79.6) 5,967 64.9 (61.8–67.8) 65.7 (62.9–68.4) 5,632 36.5 (33.7–39.5) 36.8 (34.0–39.7)
Hispanic 5,381 83.8 (82.1–85.3) 82.4 (80.7–84.0) 5,307 70.7 (68.6–72.7) 69.7 (67.6–71.8) 4,985 46.6 (44.2–49.0) 46.9 (44.6–49.2)
A/PI 1,158 71.8 (66.4–76.5) 71.7 (66.3–76.6) 1,150 61.4 (55.9–66.5) 61.9 (56.5–67.1) 1,084 31.8 (27.0–37.1) 32.1 (27.3–37.3)
AI/AN 1,271 82.0 (77.6–85.6) 82.8 (78.6–86.3) 1,264 71.7 (66.4–76.4) 73.6 (68.9–77.9) 1,203 42.6 (36.8–48.6) 45.1 (39.8–50.5)
Other race/Multiracial 1,586 81.7 (77.7–85.2) 82.5 (78.5–85.9) 1,573 74.0 (69.1–78.4) 75.2 (70.8–79.2) 1,417 37.4 (32.0–43.1) 38.4 (33.1–43.9)
Education level
Less than high school diploma 4,315 77.2 (74.9–79.3) 78.1 (75.6–80.5) 4,279 62.5 (59.7–65.1) 63.6 (60.6–66.6) 4,163 45.4 (42.5–48.3) 46.2 (43.2–49.3)
High school diploma 16,753 76.9 (75.4–78.3) 78.9 (77.4–80.2) 16,824 64.5 (62.8–66.1) 67.3 (65.6–68.9) 15,766 34.0 (32.4–35.7) 37.1 (35.3–39.0)
College or technical school 44,641 81.5 (80.6–82.4) 83.2 (82.4–84.1) 44,630 74.1 (73.1–75.1) 75.8 (74.8–76.8) 39,121 34.0 (32.9–35.1) 36.1 (34.9–37.3)
Federal poverty level, %
<100 5,896 79.0 (76.9–81.0) 78.1 (75.9–80.1) 5,850 66.6 (64.1–69.0) 65.9 (63.4–68.3) 5,570 44.0 (41.3–46.7) 44.0 (41.4–46.6)
100–199 12,773 77.5 (75.8–79.1) 80.2 (78.5–81.8) 12,842 66.6 (64.7–68.5) 69.7 (67.7–71.6) 12,049 37.8 (35.8–39.9) 41.1 (38.8–43.5)
≥200 36,949 82.3 (81.3–83.2) 83.9 (82.9–84.9) 36,873 74.5 (73.4–75.6) 75.6 (74.4–76.7) 32,219 33.7 (32.5–34.9) 36.0 (34.6–37.4)
Unknown 10,269 74.2 (72.1–76.3) 76.6 (74.3–78.7) 10,348 61.8 (59.4–64.1) 65.2 (62.5–67.8) 9,377 31.4 (29.2–33.8) 35.8 (33.0–38.8)
Veteran
Yes 9,017 79.4 (77.3–81.4) 86.6 (84.2–88.7) 9,071 71.2 (68.8–73.5) 78.8 (75.0–82.1) 8,277 37.2 (35.0–39.6) 48.5 (44.4–52.7)
No 56,801 79.8 (79.0–80.5) 80.9 (80.2–81.7) 56,772 69.9 (69.0–70.7) 71.2 (70.3–72.1) 50,876 35.5 (34.5–36.5) 37.1 (36.1–38.2)
Disability status**
Yes 20,225 75.0 (73.7–76.3) 79.4 (78.0–80.8) 20,356 64.6 (63.1–66.0) 69.4 (67.6–71.1) 19,149 34.3 (32.8–35.8) 38.8 (36.9–40.8)
No 45,143 81.6 (80.7–82.4) 82.2 (81.4–83.1) 45,055 72.2 (71.2–73.2) 72.9 (71.9–73.9) 39,614 36.4 (35.3–37.5) 37.6 (36.4–38.7)
Health insurance coverage
Yes 62,282 79.8 (79.0–80.6) 81.9 (81.2–82.7) 62,369 70.5 (69.6–71.3) 72.8 (71.9–73.7) 55,905 34.9 (34.0–35.8) 37.4 (36.3–38.4)
No 3,416 78.9 (76.2–81.3) 76.9 (74.1–79.5) 3,359 65.7 (62.6–68.6) 62.8 (59.6–65.8) 3,141 45.8 (42.5–49.1) 44.5 (41.2–47.8)
Reported current drinking
Yes 35,154 85.0 (84.1–85.8) 85.8 (84.9–86.6) 34,990 78.6 (77.5–79.6) 79.2 (78.2–80.2) 30,432 39.4 (38.1–40.7) 40.7 (39.3–42.1)
No 30,076 73.5 (72.3–74.6) 76.4 (75.2–77.6) 30,271 59.8 (58.5–61.1) 63.1 (61.7–64.5) 28,198 31.5 (30.3–32.8) 34.7 (33.3–36.2)
Reported binge drinking††
Yes 7,807 89.3 (87.9–90.6) 88.7 (87.2–90.0) 7,725 83.8 (82.1–85.4) 83.6 (81.8–85.2) 6,741 47.9 (45.2–50.5) 47.3 (44.7–50.0)
No 57,042 78.0 (77.2–78.9) 80.2 (79.4–81.0) 57,162 67.6 (66.7–68.5) 69.8 (68.8–70.8) 51,553 33.5 (32.6–34.5) 36.1 (35.0–37.2)

Abbreviations: AI/AN = American Indian/Alaska Native; A/PI = Asian/Pacific Islander; CI = confidence interval; FPL = federal poverty level.
* Estimates are age-standardized to the 2000 projected population for the United States.
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Kansas, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, Tennessee, and Wisconsin.
§ Persons in all racial groups were non-Hispanic. Persons who self-identified as Hispanic might have been of any race.
Poverty categories are based on the ratio of the respondent’s annual household income to the appropriate simplified 2016 federal poverty threshold (given family size: number of adults (1–14) in the household and number of children in the household) defined by the U.S. Census Bureau. This ratio is multiplied by 100 to be expressed as a percentage, and federal poverty thresholds were then used to categorize respondents into four FPL categories: 1) <100% of FPL (poor), 2) ≥100%–<200% of FPL (near poor), 3) ≥200% of FPL (not poor), and 4) unknown.
** Respondents were asked “Are you deaf or do you have serious difficulty hearing?” (hearing); “Are you blind or do you have serious difficulty seeing, even when wearing glasses?” (vision); “Because of a physical, mental, or emotional condition, do you have serious difficulty concentrating, remembering, or making decisions?” (cognition); “Do you have serious difficulty walking or climbing stairs?” (mobility); “Do you have difficulty dressing or bathing?” (self-care); and “Because of a physical, mental, or emotional condition, do you have difficulty doing errands alone such as visiting a doctor’s office or shopping?” (independent living). Respondents were identified as having one of the disability types if they answered “yes” to the relevant question. Persons who responded “yes” to at least one disability question were identified as having any disability. Persons who responded “no” to all six questions were identified as having no disability. Missing responses and respondents who answered “don’t know” or who declined to answer were excluded.
†† Respondents who reported consuming four or more drinks on at least one occasion during the preceding 30 days for women and five or more drinks for men. An occasion is generally defined as 2–3 hours.

TABLE 2. Weighted crude and age-standardized* estimates of being advised about harmful or risky drinking levels and to reduce the level of drinking, among U.S. adults who reported being asked an alcohol use screening–related question by a health care provider at last routine checkup in the past 2 years and reported current binge drinking in the past 30 days at time of survey — Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 13 states§ and the District of Columbia, 2017Return to your place in the text
Characteristic Adults who were asked an alcohol use screening–related question and reported current binge drinking in the past 30 days at time of survey
Advised about level of drinking harmful/risky to health Advised to reduce drinking
Sample size Crude %
(95% CI)
Age–standardized %
(95% CI)
Sample size Crude %
(95% CI)
Age–standardized %
(95% CI)
Total 6,811 41.8 (39.1–44.4) 41.7 (39.0–44.4) 6,943 20.6 (18.6–22.6) 20.1 (18.2–22.2)
Sex
Male 3,924 47.4 (44.0–50.8) 46.7 (43.2–50.3) 4,004 24.9 (22.3–27.8) 24.1 (21.5–26.8)
Female 2,883 32.7 (28.9–36.7) 33.8 (29.9–37.9) 2,935 13.6 (11.0–16.5) 13.7 (10.9–17.1)
Age group (yrs)
18–24 655 43.2 (35.6–51.2) 665 16.6 (12.2–22.2)
25–34 1,187 42.4 (37.1–47.8) 1,214 20.8 (16.8–25.4)
35–44 1,186 37.6 (31.5–44.0) 1,213 17.1 (13.5–21.4)
45–64 2,754 42.7 (38.8–46.7) 2,812 25.9 (22.4–29.8)
≥65 1,029 43.3 (35.2–51.7) 1,039 15.7 (10.9–22.3)
Race/Ethnicity**
White 5,046 40.9 (38.1–43.8) 40.9 (38.0–43.9) 5,161 16.8 (15.0–18.9) 16.8 (14.9–19.0)
Black 511 43.0 (34.2–52.3) 44.8 (35.7–54.4) 514 20.1 (14.5–27.1) 19.9 (15.0–25.9)
Hispanic 720 42.6 (36.3–49.1) 42.6 (35.2–50.4) 729 28.8 (23.4–34.8) 28.5 (23.4–34.2)
A/PI 105 45.9 (29.3–63.4) 50.5 (33.9–67.1) 104 19.9 (10.7–33.9)†† N/A§§
AI/AN 161 58.7 (41.6–74.0) 57.8 (44.8–69.7) 163 N/A§§ 27.9 (17.2–41.9)††
Other race/Multiracial 189 35.6 (24.2–49.0) 34.9 (24.4–47.1) 190 23.6 (13.8–37.4)†† 24.6 (15.1–37.5)††
Education level
Less than high school diploma 340 61.9 (52.5–70.4) 63.8 (54.4–72.3) 343 42.4 (33.2–52.2) 38.2 (30.0–47.1)
High school diploma 1,659 40.4 (35.1–45.8) 40.5 (35.5–45.8) 1,682 22.0 (18.1–26.4) 21.1 (17.6–25.2)
College or technical school 4,806 38.5 (35.7–41.4) 38.4 (35.5–41.4) 4,912 16.0 (14.0–18.2) 16.0 (13.9–18.3)
Federal poverty level, %¶¶
<100 578 44.9 (37.3–52.8) 41.9 (34.9–49.3) 583 36.2 (28.9–44.1) 37.5 (30.8–44.8)
100–199 1,076 47.9 (41.0–54.9) 47.9 (41.1–54.7) 1,088 21.8 (17.2–27.2) 21.5 (17.6–26.1)
≥200 4,532 39.0 (36.0–42.2) 39.4 (36.3–42.7) 4,632 16.5 (14.5–18.8) 16.3 (14.2–18.8)
Unknown 625 42.4 (33.6–51.7) 39.8 (33.3–46.8) 640 21.7 (15.5–29.4) 23.6 (17.6–30.9)
Veteran
Yes 856 52.1 (45.1–59.1) 53.5 (45.8–61.1) 873 21.3 (16.3–27.4) 21.5 (16.1–28.0)
No 5,951 40.6 (37.8–43.4) 40.8 (37.8–43.9) 6,066 20.5 (18.4–22.7) 19.8 (17.7–22.1)
Disability status***
Yes 1,451 50.1 (44.3–56.0) 49.2 (43.7–54.7) 1,472 28.7 (24.1–33.9) 28.2 (23.6–33.3)
No 5,330 39.5 (36.6–42.5) 39.3 (36.3–42.3) 5,440 18.4 (16.3–20.7) 17.8 (15.8–19.9)
Health insurance coverage
Yes 6,287 41.6 (38.8–44.4) 41.4 (38.6–44.3) 6,407 19.3 (17.3–21.4) 18.9 (16.9–21.0)
No 507 44.3 (36.9–52.1) 48.6 (40.7–56.6) 518 33.1 (26.1–41.0) 36.2 (28.2–45.1)

Abbreviations: AI/AN = American Indian/Alaska Native; A/PI = Asian/Pacific Islander; CI = confidence interval; FPL = federal poverty level; N/A = not available.
* Estimates are age-standardized to the 2000 projected population for the United States.
Respondents who reported consuming four or more drinks on at least one occasion during the preceding 30 days for women and five or more drinks for men. An occasion is generally defined as 2–3 hours.
§ Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Kansas, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, Tennessee, and Wisconsin.
At a checkup in the past 2 years.
** Persons in all racial groups were non-Hispanic; persons who self-identified as Hispanic might have been of any race.
†† Relative standard error = 0.20–0.30.
§§ Estimate not available because relative standard error >0.30.
¶¶ Poverty categories are based on the ratio of the respondent’s annual household income to the appropriate simplified 2016 federal poverty threshold (given family size: number of adults (1–14) in the household and number of children (≥0) in the household) defined by the U.S. Census Bureau. This ratio is multiplied by 100 to be expressed as a percentage, and federal poverty thresholds were then used to categorize respondents into four FPL categories: 1) <100% of FPL (poor), 2) ≥100% to <200% of FPL (near poor), 3) ≥200% of FPL (not poor), and 4) unknown.
*** Respondents were asked “Are you deaf or do you have serious difficulty hearing?” (hearing); “Are you blind or do you have serious difficulty seeing, even when wearing glasses?” (vision); “Because of a physical, mental, or emotional condition, do you have serious difficulty concentrating, remembering, or making decisions?” (cognition); “Do you have serious difficulty walking or climbing stairs?” (mobility); “Do you have difficulty dressing or bathing?” (self-care); and “Because of a physical, mental, or emotional condition, do you have difficulty doing errands alone such as visiting a doctor’s office or shopping?” (independent living). Respondents were identified as having one of the disability types if they answered “yes” to the relevant question. Persons who responded “yes” to at least one disability question were identified as having any disability. Persons who responded “no” to all six questions were identified as having no disability. Missing responses and respondents who answered “don’t know” or who declined to answer were excluded.


Suggested citation for this article: McKnight-Eily LR, Okoro CA, Turay K, Acero C, Hungerford D. Screening for Alcohol Use and Brief Counseling of Adults — 13 States and the District of Columbia, 2017. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2020;69:265–270. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm6910a3.

MMWR and Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report are service marks of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Use of trade names and commercial sources is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
References to non-CDC sites on the Internet are provided as a service to MMWR readers and do not constitute or imply endorsement of these organizations or their programs by CDC or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. CDC is not responsible for the content of pages found at these sites. URL addresses listed in MMWR were current as of the date of publication.

All HTML versions of MMWR articles are generated from final proofs through an automated process. This conversion might result in character translation or format errors in the HTML version. Users are referred to the electronic PDF version (https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr) and/or the original MMWR paper copy for printable versions of official text, figures, and tables.

Questions or messages regarding errors in formatting should be addressed to mmwrq@cdc.gov.

View Page In: PDF [324K]