%0 Journal Article %T Effectiveness of brief interventions as part of the screening, brief intervention and referral to treatment (SBIRT) model for reducing the non-medical use of psychoactive substances: a systematic review protocol %A Matthew M Young %A Adrienne Stevens %A Amy Porath-Waller %A Tyler Pirie %A Chantelle Garritty %A Becky Skidmore %A Lucy Turner %A Cheryl Arratoon %A Nancy Haley %A Karen Leslie %A Rhoda Reardon %A Beth Sproule %A Jeremy Grimshaw %A David Moher %J Systematic Reviews %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/2046-4053-1-22 %X This article describes the protocol for a systematic review of the effectiveness of brief interventions as part of the Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment model for reducing the non-medical use of psychoactive substances. Studies will be selected in which brief interventions target non-medical psychoactive substance use (excluding alcohol, nicotine, or caffeine) among those 12£¿years and older who are opportunistically screened and deemed at risk of harms related to psychoactive substance use. We will include one-on-one verbal interventions and exclude non-verbal brief interventions (for example, the provision of information such as a pamphlet or online interventions) and group interventions. Primary, secondary and adverse outcomes of interest are prespecified. Randomized controlled trials will be included; non-randomized controlled trials, controlled before-after studies and interrupted time series designs will be considered in the absence of randomized controlled trials. We will search several bibliographic databases (for example, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, CORK) and search sources for grey literature. We will meta-analyze studies where possible. We will conduct subgroup analyses, if possible, according to drug class and intervention setting.This review will provide evidence on the effectiveness of brief interventions as part of the Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment protocol aimed at the non-medical use of psychoactive substances and may provide guidance as to where future research might be most beneficial. %K Brief intervention %K Drug use %K Psychoactive substance %K Referral to treatment %K SBIRT %K Screening %K Substance use %K Systematic review %U http://www.systematicreviewsjournal.com/content/1/1/22/abstract