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Clinical Pediatrics, Vol. 29, No. 1, 38-43 (1990)
DOI: 10.1177/000992289002900106

Potential Substance Abuse

Detection Among Adolescent Patients Using the Drug and Alcohol Problem (DAP) Quick Screen, A 30-item Questionnaire

Richard H. Schwartz, MD

Department of Pediatrics, Fairfax Hospital, Falls Church, Virginia

Philip W. Wirtz, PhD

Department of Management Science, George Washington University, Washington, DC

The authors administered an abbreviated revision of a previously field-tested, self-administered, brief screening test (the 30-item Drug and Alcohol Problem Quick Screen) to 355 consecutive middle-class adolescent patients seen at a five-pediatrician group practice setting. Ninety-six percent (341) of the subjects completed the 30-item screening questionnaire. Eighty-nine percent of the 341 responders wrote in their names in the space provided for that purpose. Fifty-two patients (approximately 15%) of the 341 responded "yes" to six or more items in the current study. Based on a previous study comparing scores from 200 adolescents from the same pediatric practice with answers from 100 identified adolescent drug abusers at a drug abuse treatment facility, those patients with a score of 6 or more were considered high risk for "red flag" behaviors, particularly drug or alcohol abuse. Forty (77%) of those patients who scored six or greater identified themselves by name.

Four key items on the questionnaire accounted for 70 percent of the variation between those at high and those at low risk for drug or alcohol abuse. These four most important items encompassed 1) use of tobacco products; 2) accusation by others of having a drinking or drug problem; 3) school suspension; and 4) riding in a motor vehicle with a driver who drank too much. The DAP Quick Screen appears to be practical as a screening tool in physician's offices for detection of serious problems during adolescence.


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