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Screening to Brief Intervention (S2BI)

The online Screening to Brief Intervention (S2BI) identifies youth risk factors for tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana use in 1-2 minutes.

FREE

Description

Screening to Brief Intervention (S2BI) is intended to be used in pediatric settings, and identifies problematic tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana use.

This is intended for 12 to 17 year olds to answer and takes about 1-2 minutes to complete.

This is an online survey that can be completed as a patient, student, or with a clinician asking the questions. 

Pediatricians could complete this with patients at annual well-visits.

School counselors or other trained professionals could complete this once a year or per students in certain grade levels as part of prevention screening. 

Ensure your office has procedures and ongoing training regarding recommendations and/or referrals and resources for the adolescents or families if someone demonstrates medium or high risk. 

 

*There are various ways to implement screening in your school or office. Contact the SBCOE to discuss.

No Wrong Door Marketplace materials or resources are reviewed and curated by the Ohio School-Based Center of Excellence for Prevention & Early Intervention. To discuss resources, add, or suggest updates to No Wrong Door Marketplace, please call 513-529-2450. www.OhioSBCOE.org

 

Tool Validation:

Psychometric properties for the S2BI tool were first described by Levy et al. in 2014.1S2BI was originally validated in a relatively small study in pediatric medical settings. In a recent study (2023) by Levy and colleagues found a high agreement between S2BI screening results and the criterion standard measure demonstrating additional psychometric validation.2 The findings from this research are consistent with similar research in adults and support the principle of frequency-based screening as a good mechanism for detecting adolescents that are at high risk for substance use disorders.

Developer’s JSON Application Programming Interface Available Here. For additional information on how to use this feed and example code, use this form to talk with our development team.

  1. Levy, S., Weiss, R., Sherritt, L., Ziemnik, R., Spalding, A., Van Hook, S., & Shrier, L. A. (2014). An electronic screen for triaging adolescent substance use by risk levels. JAMA Pediatrics. 168(9), 822-828.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4270364/
  2. Levy S, Brogna M, Minegishi M, Subramaniam G, McCormack J, Kline M, Menzin E, Allende-Richter S, Fuller A, Lewis M, Collins J, Hubbard Z, Mitchell SG, Weiss R, Weitzman E. Assessment of Screening Tools to Identify Substance Use Disorders Among Adolescents. JAMA Netw Open. 2023 May 1;6(5):e2314422. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.14422. PMID: 37213103; PMCID: PMC10203888.

Related Articles:

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22218839/

https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article-abstract/129/2/205/32652/Drinking-Frequency-as-a-Brief-Screen-for?redirectedFrom=fulltext

Additional Information

Additional information

Description

Screening to Brief Intervention (S2BI) is intended to be used in pediatric settings, and identifies problematic tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana use.

This is intended for 12 to 17 year olds to answer and takes about 1-2 minutes to complete.

This is an online survey that can be completed as a patient, student, or with a clinician asking the questions. 

Pediatricians could complete this with patients at annual well-visits.

School counselors or other trained professionals could complete this once a year or per students in certain grade levels as part of prevention screening. 

Ensure your office has procedures and ongoing training regarding recommendations and/or referrals and resources for the adolescents or families if someone demonstrates medium or high risk. 

 

*There are various ways to implement screening in your school or office. Contact the SBCOE to discuss.

No Wrong Door Marketplace materials or resources are reviewed and curated by the Ohio School-Based Center of Excellence for Prevention & Early Intervention. To discuss resources, add, or suggest updates to No Wrong Door Marketplace, please call 513-529-2450. www.OhioSBCOE.org

 

Tool Validation:

Psychometric properties for the S2BI tool were first described by Levy et al. in 2014.1S2BI was originally validated in a relatively small study in pediatric medical settings. In a recent study (2023) by Levy and colleagues found a high agreement between S2BI screening results and the criterion standard measure demonstrating additional psychometric validation.2 The findings from this research are consistent with similar research in adults and support the principle of frequency-based screening as a good mechanism for detecting adolescents that are at high risk for substance use disorders.

Developer’s JSON Application Programming Interface Available Here. For additional information on how to use this feed and example code, use this form to talk with our development team.

  1. Levy, S., Weiss, R., Sherritt, L., Ziemnik, R., Spalding, A., Van Hook, S., & Shrier, L. A. (2014). An electronic screen for triaging adolescent substance use by risk levels. JAMA Pediatrics. 168(9), 822-828.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4270364/
  2. Levy S, Brogna M, Minegishi M, Subramaniam G, McCormack J, Kline M, Menzin E, Allende-Richter S, Fuller A, Lewis M, Collins J, Hubbard Z, Mitchell SG, Weiss R, Weitzman E. Assessment of Screening Tools to Identify Substance Use Disorders Among Adolescents. JAMA Netw Open. 2023 May 1;6(5):e2314422. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.14422. PMID: 37213103; PMCID: PMC10203888.

Related Articles:

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22218839/

https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article-abstract/129/2/205/32652/Drinking-Frequency-as-a-Brief-Screen-for?redirectedFrom=fulltext

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