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A US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Office of Inspector General (OIG) report has found that many patients who scored high on a screening for alcohol use are not receiving recommended counseling interventions.
The OIG report evaluated Veterans Health Administration (VHA) primary care staff adherence to the screening requirements and intervention interventions during fiscal year 2024 (October 1, 2023, to September 30, 2024). VHA primary care clinicians used the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test – Consumption (AUDIT-C), which produces a score of 0 to 12, to screen almost 4 million patients.
Based on sex-specific thresholds, the report found 8% of men and 11% of women screened positive for unhealthy alcohol use (AUDIT-C score ≥ 4 for men and ≥ 3 for women). However, because VHA electronic health record prompts clinicians to provide intervention for patients with scores ≥ 5, 54% of men and 75% of women who may have benefited from brief intervention did not.
A brief intervention with a clinician consists of a 5-minute counseling session, with individualized feedback and a discussion on strategies for the patient to reduce or abstain from alcohol.
Aligning with VHA guidance, clinicians provided brief intervention to 77% of men and 75% of women who recorded an AUDIT-C score ≥ 5. However, < 2% of patients with a score at the sex-specific threshold received brief intervention.
Veterans have high rates of unhealthy alcohol use, which is associated with increased risk of interpersonal violence and poor health outcomes. In a May 2026 study, 44% of 3117 veterans met criteria for alcohol use disorder; 44% reported past 30-day alcohol use.
The VHA requires annual screening using the AUDIT-C. In a study of 63,397 VHA patients, 25% of women and 28% of men screened positive for unhealthy alcohol use. The prevalence of alcohol and other substance abuse disorders increased with increasing AUDIT-C scores, ranging as high as 82% for women and 69% for men.
A 2018 analysis found that tailoring the AUDIT-C binge-drinking item, AUDIT-C scoring, or both increased detection of unhealthy alcohol use in women. In 2020, VHA adjusted the binge drinking item for women, reducing it to 4 drinks on an occasion from 6 to characterize binge drinking. Despite this adjustment, the VHA maintained an AUDIT-C score ≥ 5 to prompt brief intervention for both women and men.
A 2022 study of 4148 veterans found that 15% were not properly screened for alcohol despite 1 in 11 met Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition criteria for alcohol abuse/dependence. A lack of screening may not be the issue, however. In the OIG report, VHA found 95% adherence to alcohol use screening in 2024 using a sample-based performance measure and 79% adherence after transitioning that year to a population-based measure. OIG determined that the population-based measure provides a more accurate representation of screening documentation.
Following the OIG recommendations, VA Under Secretary for Health John J. Bartrum, JD, MBA, provided an action plan to evaluate factors that affect screening, identify facilities for performance improvement, and evaluate the use of sex-specific alcohol use screening thresholds.
A US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Office of Inspector General (OIG) report has found that many patients who scored high on a screening for alcohol use are not receiving recommended counseling interventions.
The OIG report evaluated Veterans Health Administration (VHA) primary care staff adherence to the screening requirements and intervention interventions during fiscal year 2024 (October 1, 2023, to September 30, 2024). VHA primary care clinicians used the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test – Consumption (AUDIT-C), which produces a score of 0 to 12, to screen almost 4 million patients.
Based on sex-specific thresholds, the report found 8% of men and 11% of women screened positive for unhealthy alcohol use (AUDIT-C score ≥ 4 for men and ≥ 3 for women). However, because VHA electronic health record prompts clinicians to provide intervention for patients with scores ≥ 5, 54% of men and 75% of women who may have benefited from brief intervention did not.
A brief intervention with a clinician consists of a 5-minute counseling session, with individualized feedback and a discussion on strategies for the patient to reduce or abstain from alcohol.
Aligning with VHA guidance, clinicians provided brief intervention to 77% of men and 75% of women who recorded an AUDIT-C score ≥ 5. However, < 2% of patients with a score at the sex-specific threshold received brief intervention.
Veterans have high rates of unhealthy alcohol use, which is associated with increased risk of interpersonal violence and poor health outcomes. In a May 2026 study, 44% of 3117 veterans met criteria for alcohol use disorder; 44% reported past 30-day alcohol use.
The VHA requires annual screening using the AUDIT-C. In a study of 63,397 VHA patients, 25% of women and 28% of men screened positive for unhealthy alcohol use. The prevalence of alcohol and other substance abuse disorders increased with increasing AUDIT-C scores, ranging as high as 82% for women and 69% for men.
A 2018 analysis found that tailoring the AUDIT-C binge-drinking item, AUDIT-C scoring, or both increased detection of unhealthy alcohol use in women. In 2020, VHA adjusted the binge drinking item for women, reducing it to 4 drinks on an occasion from 6 to characterize binge drinking. Despite this adjustment, the VHA maintained an AUDIT-C score ≥ 5 to prompt brief intervention for both women and men.
A 2022 study of 4148 veterans found that 15% were not properly screened for alcohol despite 1 in 11 met Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition criteria for alcohol abuse/dependence. A lack of screening may not be the issue, however. In the OIG report, VHA found 95% adherence to alcohol use screening in 2024 using a sample-based performance measure and 79% adherence after transitioning that year to a population-based measure. OIG determined that the population-based measure provides a more accurate representation of screening documentation.
Following the OIG recommendations, VA Under Secretary for Health John J. Bartrum, JD, MBA, provided an action plan to evaluate factors that affect screening, identify facilities for performance improvement, and evaluate the use of sex-specific alcohol use screening thresholds.
A US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Office of Inspector General (OIG) report has found that many patients who scored high on a screening for alcohol use are not receiving recommended counseling interventions.
The OIG report evaluated Veterans Health Administration (VHA) primary care staff adherence to the screening requirements and intervention interventions during fiscal year 2024 (October 1, 2023, to September 30, 2024). VHA primary care clinicians used the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test – Consumption (AUDIT-C), which produces a score of 0 to 12, to screen almost 4 million patients.
Based on sex-specific thresholds, the report found 8% of men and 11% of women screened positive for unhealthy alcohol use (AUDIT-C score ≥ 4 for men and ≥ 3 for women). However, because VHA electronic health record prompts clinicians to provide intervention for patients with scores ≥ 5, 54% of men and 75% of women who may have benefited from brief intervention did not.
A brief intervention with a clinician consists of a 5-minute counseling session, with individualized feedback and a discussion on strategies for the patient to reduce or abstain from alcohol.
Aligning with VHA guidance, clinicians provided brief intervention to 77% of men and 75% of women who recorded an AUDIT-C score ≥ 5. However, < 2% of patients with a score at the sex-specific threshold received brief intervention.
Veterans have high rates of unhealthy alcohol use, which is associated with increased risk of interpersonal violence and poor health outcomes. In a May 2026 study, 44% of 3117 veterans met criteria for alcohol use disorder; 44% reported past 30-day alcohol use.
The VHA requires annual screening using the AUDIT-C. In a study of 63,397 VHA patients, 25% of women and 28% of men screened positive for unhealthy alcohol use. The prevalence of alcohol and other substance abuse disorders increased with increasing AUDIT-C scores, ranging as high as 82% for women and 69% for men.
A 2018 analysis found that tailoring the AUDIT-C binge-drinking item, AUDIT-C scoring, or both increased detection of unhealthy alcohol use in women. In 2020, VHA adjusted the binge drinking item for women, reducing it to 4 drinks on an occasion from 6 to characterize binge drinking. Despite this adjustment, the VHA maintained an AUDIT-C score ≥ 5 to prompt brief intervention for both women and men.
A 2022 study of 4148 veterans found that 15% were not properly screened for alcohol despite 1 in 11 met Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition criteria for alcohol abuse/dependence. A lack of screening may not be the issue, however. In the OIG report, VHA found 95% adherence to alcohol use screening in 2024 using a sample-based performance measure and 79% adherence after transitioning that year to a population-based measure. OIG determined that the population-based measure provides a more accurate representation of screening documentation.
Following the OIG recommendations, VA Under Secretary for Health John J. Bartrum, JD, MBA, provided an action plan to evaluate factors that affect screening, identify facilities for performance improvement, and evaluate the use of sex-specific alcohol use screening thresholds.