Brief intervention (BI) is intended as an early intervention for  non-treatment-seeking, non-alcohol-dependent, hazardous and harmful drinkers.
This text provides a brief summary of key BI research findings from the last  three decades and discusses a number of knowledge gaps that need to be  addressed.
Five areas are described: patient intervention efficacy and  effectiveness; barriers to BI implementation by health professionals;  individual-level factors that impact on BI implementation; organization-level  factors that impact on BI implementation; and society-level factors that impact  on BI implementation.
BI research has focused largely upon the individual  patient and health professional levels, with the main focus upon primary health  care research, and studies are lacking in other settings. However, research  must, to a larger degree, take into account the organizational and wider context  in which BI occurs, as well as interaction between factors at different levels,  in order to advance the understanding of how wider implementation of BI can be  achieved in various settings and how different population groups can be reached.
It is also important to expand BI research beyond its current parameters to  investigate more ambitious long-term educational programmes and new  organizational models. More widespread implementation of BI will require many  different interventions (efforts, actions, initiatives, etc.) at different  interlinked levels, from implementation interventions targeting individual  health professionals' knowledge, skills, attitudes and behaviours concerning  alcohol issues,
BI and behaviour change counselling to efforts at the organizational and societal levels that influence the conditions for delivering BI as part of routine health care.
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