Alcohol, Drugs and Addictive Behaviours
The Unit works globally to improve health and well-being of populations by articulating, promoting, supporting and monitoring evidence-informed policies, strategies and interventions to reduce the burden associated with alcohol, drugs and addictive behaviours.

Screening and brief intervention for alcohol problems in primary health care

 

BACKGROUND

There are many forms of excessive drinking that cause substantial risk or harm to the individual. They include high level drinking each day, repeated episodes of drinking to intoxication, drinking that is actually causing physical or mental harm, and drinking that has resulted in the person becoming dependent on alcohol. Excessive drinking causes illness and distress to the drinker and his or her family and friends. It is a major cause of breakdown in relationships, trauma, hospitalization, prolonged disability and early death. Alcohol-related problems represent an immense economic loss to many communities around the world. 

 

Screening for alcohol use: why AUDIT?

The AUDIT was developed as a simple method of screening for excessive drinking and to assist in brief assessment. It can help identify excessive drinking as the cause of the presenting illness. It provides a framework for intervention to help risky drinkers reduce or cease alcohol consumption and thereby avoid the harmful consequences of their drinking. The AUDIT also helps to identify alcohol dependence and some specific consequences of harmful drinking. Of utmost importance for screening is the fact that people who are not dependent on alcohol may stop or reduce their alcohol consumption with appropriate assistance and effort. The manual is particularly designed for health care practitioners and a range of health settings, but with suitable instructions it can be self-administered or used by non-health professionals. 

Screening for alcohol consumption among patients in primary care carries many potential benefits. It provides an opportunity to educate patients about low-risk consumption levels and the risks of excessive alcohol use. Information about the amount and frequency of alcohol consumption may inform the diagnosis of the patient's presenting condition, and it may alert clinicians to the need to advise patients whose alcohol consumption might adversely affect their use of medications and other aspects of their treatment. Screening also offers the opportunity for practitioners to take preventative measures that have proven effective in reducing alcohol-related risks. 

Development and validation of the AUDIT

The AUDIT was developed and evaluated over a period of two decades, and it has been found to provide an accurate measure of risk across gender, age and cultures. As the first screening test designed specifically for use in primary care settings, the AUDIT has the following advantages:

  • Cross-national standardization: the AUDIT was validated on primary health care patients in six countries. It is the only screening test specifically designed for international use;
  • Identifies hazardous and harmful alcohol use, as well as possible dependence;
  • Brief, rapid and flexible;
  • Designed for primary health care workers;
  • Consistent with ICD-10 definitions of alcohol dependence and harmful alcohol use;
  • Focuses on recent alcohol use.

BRIEF INTERVENTION

Brief interventions are those practices that aim to identify a real or potential alcohol problem and motivate an individual to do something about it. Brief interventions have become increasingly valuable in the management of individuals with alcohol-related problems. During the past 20 years, there have been numerous randomized trials of brief interventions in a variety of health care settings. Studies have been conducted in Australia, Bulgaria, Mexico, the United Kingdom, Norway, Sweden, the United States and many other countries. Results from these studies show that there is clear evidence that well-designed brief intervention strategies are effective, low-cost and easy to administer.

Because research has shown that brief interventions are low in cost and have proven to be effective across the spectrum of alcohol problems, health workers and policy-makers have increasingly focused on them as tools to fill the gap between the primary prevention efforts and more intensive treatment for persons with serious alcohol use disorders. It is worth noting that brief interventions are not designed to treat persons with alcohol dependence, which generally requires greater expertise and more intensive clinical management. However, they might serve well as as initial treatment for severely dependent patients seeking extended treatment.

Alongside with the companion publication on the AUDIT, WHO has also produced a manual to aid primary health care workers in administering brief interventions to persons whose alcohol consumption has become hazardous or harmful to their health. Together, these manuals describe a comprehensive approach to alcohol screening and brief intervention (SBI) that is designed to improve the health of the population and patient groups as well as individuals. 

 

Related activities:

The ASSIST project - Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test

 

 

Publications

This manual introduces the AUDIT, the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test, and describes how to use it to identify persons with hazardous and harmful...

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21th edition, Epidemiological Bulletin WHO Health Emergencies Programme WHO Regional Office for South-East Asia‎, 22 October 2025. Reporting period: 06 Sep to 19 Oct 2025

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Global nutrition targets 2030: topical briefs on maternal, infant and young child nutrition

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Global nutrition targets 2030: child wasting brief

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Global nutrition targets 2030: breastfeeding brief

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Global nutrition targets 2030: childhood overweight brief

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Global nutrition targets 2030: low birth weight brief

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Global report on neglected tropical diseases 2025

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Global nutrition targets 2030: anaemia brief

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Guidance on safe and supportive care in community care centres for individuals with mild mpox in camps for internally displaced persons or refugees

The objective of this document is to provide an overview of the principles and strategies for safety and effectively managing mild, uncomplicated mpox...

Global nutrition targets 2030: stunting brief

Stunting, or being too short for one’s age, is defined as a height that is more than two standard deviations below the World Health Organization...

Consolidated guidance on tuberculosis data generation and use: Module 4: Surveys of costs faced by households affected by tuberculosis

One of the three high-level targets of the World Health Organization’s End TB Strategy (2016–2035) is that no TB-affected households face total...

WHO strategic approach on air quality, energy access and health

WHO, as the coordinating authority on international health, supports countries in protecting public health through evidence-based policies and actions....

Technical consultation to review the ACTwatch Lite survey methodology

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Evaluation policy (2025)

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Joint external evaluation of the International Health Regulations (2005) core capacities of Malawi: mission report, 2-6 December 2024

The Government of Malawi conducted the second multisectoral Joint External Evaluation (JEE) from 2–6 December 2024. The major purpose of this exercise...

Governance for public health across the health and allied sectors: a report to guide country-level institutional capacity for essential public health functions underpinning multisectoral approaches

The diverse public health challenges require multisectoral, integrated action, supported by robust and well-coordinated governance that...

Related resources

The ASSIST-linked brief intervention for hazardous and harmful substance use

This manual is a companion to ‘The Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test (ASSIST): manual for use in primary care’. The...

The Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test (ASSIST)

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Self-help strategies for cutting down or stopping substance use (ASSIST)

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Guidelines for identification and management of substance use and substance use disorders in pregnancy

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mhGAP Intervention Guide - Version 2.0

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mhGAP Training Manuals - for the mhGAP Intervention Guide for mental, neurological and substance use disorders in non-specialized health settings, version 2.0

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