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. 2008 Jun;49(3):392–401. doi: 10.3325/cmj.2008.3.392

Table 2.

Evaluation summary ratings of screening and brief intervention (SBI) implementation in primary care in Vhembe District, South Africa

SBI implementation factors No. of clinics which answered “yes” or (strongly) agree
P*
clinics with good implementation (n = 9) clinics with poor implementation (n = 9)
Structure and organization of clinics:
  all nurses in the clinic trained in SBI 8 3 0.050
  feedback provided 4 2 0.637
  nurse clinical workload <35 patients a day 7 2 0.057
  competing priorities (eg, voluntary HIV counseling and testing, tuberculosis, antenatal care, Papanicolaou smear examinations) 1 5 0.131
  teamwork 7 3 0.153
  tension in the clinic 2 4 0.620
Perceptions of innovation:
  early adopters (first 2 mo) 6 0 0.009
  perceived benefit from SBI 9 8 >0.95
  compatibility with beliefs, values, past history and current needs 6 4 0.637
  low perceived complexity of innovation 8 4 0.131
  trialability and observability 4 3 >0.95

*Fisher exact test.

†The cut-off for clinics with good SBI implementation was 120 and more Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test questionnaires retrieved.

‡According to District Health Information System Database (15).