Title: Nevada Tobacco Users Helpline
1Drug Treatment Model in a Quitline Setting
Elizabeth E. Fildes, EdD Education and Research
Director
2Nevada Tobacco Users Helpline
- Provides an integrated approach, combining the
disciplines of medicine and counseling - Professional counselors who are Licensed,
Certified, or Certified Interns with the State
of Nevada Board of Examiners for Alcohol, Drug
and Gambling Counselors -
- The Helpline follows federal (42 C.F.R. Part 2
and HIPAA) and state regulations (NRS 641.C)
- Our Medical Director is an Associate Professor
with the University of Nevada School of Medicine,
Department of Internal Medicine. He is an
Addictionologist, and specializes in the
treatment of addiction to nicotine. - Our education and research director holds a
doctorate in health education, and is a
registered nurse. - Counselors are equipped to recognize co- or tri-
morbid issues and to consult with health care
providers on nicotine replacement therapies.
3Nevada Tobacco Users Helpline Services
- Treatment is delivered in Spanish and English
- Treatment is for adults 18 and older
- Nicotine Dependence Treatment
- Living Tobacco-Free (2 formats)
- Starter Kit (Mailer)
- Public Education Outreach
- Information-Only (Brochure)
- Health Care Professional
- Training (CEU CME credits)
- Public Information Outreach
4Treatment of Nicotine Dependence in Nevada
- In 1999, the State of Nevada Board of Examiners
for Alcohol, Drug, and Gambling Counselors came
into existence - The Board stated
- Nicotine is a drug and treatment falls under the
scope of practice of an Alcohol and Drug
Counselor
5Nicotine Dependence
- Nicotine is a highly addictive substance,
comparable in its physiological and psychological
properties to other addictive substances of
abuse. - Surgeon Generals Report on Smoking and Health,
1988
- We all know nicotine is the addictive substance
found in tobacco. - If tobacco did not contain nicotine, people would
not be dependent. Everyone would easily be able
to quit.
6Nicotine and Addiction
- Nicotine, cocaine, heroin, and alcohol all meet
criteria as addictive and dependence producing
drugs the risk of addiction following any use,
the prevalence of frequent use among current
users, and the occurrence of American Psychiatric
Association, DSM-defined dependence among current
users range from 2 to 10 times greater for
cigarettes than for these other drugs
- In the DSM IV, drug use can be diagnosed as abuse
or dependence. For nicotine, there is no
diagnosis of abuse provided- only dependence. - With alcohol, approximately 30 of users become
dependent. With nicotine, 92 of users become
dependent. It only takes 10 cigarettes for a
tobacco user to become dependent on nicotine - I want to pause here and acknowledge that some
cultures, such as First Nations People, use
tobacco as a medicine in ceremonial practice, and
we are making a distinction between nicotine
dependence and ceremonial tobacco use
Anthony et al. 1994, Exp. Clin. Psychopharm
NIDAs Monitoring The Future Survey, FDA in Fed
Register, Aug. 11, 1995 Surg. Gen 1988
7Addiction Defined
- The essence of addiction can be described as
uncontrollable, compulsive drug seeking and use
in spite of negative health and social
consequences. The focus of treatment for
substance addiction must address uncontrollable
drug seeking and use, management of withdrawal
symptoms - (www.nida.nih.gov)
- These patients do not have a bad habit. They are
not unconcerned about their health, they do not
lack the discipline required to kick the habit.
They are addicted to nicotine. The addiction
is stronger than heroine or cocaine addiction,
and abstaining from tobacco requires treatment. - Most people who quit nicotine say it is the
hardest thing they have ever done. - ltBRIDGEgt This is why Nevada Tobacco Users
Helpline uses credentialed professional drug and
alcohol counselors who specialize in the drug
nicotine
8Treatment supported by
- 1 year Proactive Professional Counseling
- Quit Kit w/individualized support literature
- Medication Assistance
- Psycho Education (2 formats)
- Group Therapy
- Home Study
9Whats covered in treatment?
- Initial Intake
- Demographic and Marketing Indicators
- Informed consent, Office Practices and HIPAA
Notice of Privacy - Release of information, as indicated
- Bio/Emotional/Social Intake
- Tobacco use History
- Co-existing medical, psychiatric and addictions
disorders, medication use
- Why do we assess co-morbidity?
- Co-morbid conditions impact treatment
- Outcomes
- Tobacco use impacts medical treatment
- Tobacco use impacts medication metabolism
- Psychiatric medication dosages
- COPD medications
- Cardiac medications
10Assessment
- Counselor completes
- Second Edition Revised American Society of
Addictions Medicine (ASAM PPC-2R) Severity Index
Profile - Rates 6 Dimensions
- Acute intoxication and/or withdrawal potential
- Biomedical conditions and problems
- Emotional, behavioral, cognitive conditions and
problem - Readiness to change Treatment acceptance/resistan
ce - Relapse, continued use or continued problem
potential - Recovery/living environment.
- Counselor determines a diagnosis following the
criteria of the DSM-IV - Counselor determines a level of care based on the
ASAM Rating - Counselor creates an individualized Treatment
Plan
11After initial Intake
- Treatment book uses a wellness paradigm to
address nicotine dependence - Psycho educational information is delivered in a
group therapy or a home study format - Support literature includes
- Spanish,
- Special Populations,
- Pregnant women,
- Smokeless tobacco users,
- Cardiac patients, etc.
- Referral List provides a list of medical, mental
health, addictions, and social services as well
as support
- Patient Receives a Quit Kit
-
- Quit kit includes
- Treatment Overview
- 85 page Treatment Book
- HIPAA Notice of Privacy
- Medication Assistance Program Information
- Psycho Educational
- Support literature to special populations
- Statewide Non-Smoking Establishments
- Referral Listing
12What happens during proactive call backs?
- Call backs are utilized to provide continual
assessment and adjustment of treatment plan
according to individual needs and to ensure
effective outcomes - Solution-Focused Theoretical framework is
enhanced through motivational interviewing to
move the patients through stages of change and
promotes the therapeutic bond between counselor
and patient. This includes, but is not limited
to how nicotine has affected an individual
physically, emotionally, mentally, and
spiritually - These four treatment components are accompanied
with specific clinical interventions to effect
change. The treatment interventions include but
are not limited to weight management, exercise,
medication, stress management, fear and anger
management, cognitive restructuring, problem
solving skills, self esteem, relapse prevention,
true purpose, balance, meditation and prayer
- Call backs provide continual adjustment of
treatment plan according to individual needs - Motivational interviewing using Solution-Focused
theoretical framework - Four Treatment Components include but are not
limited to how nicotine has affected an
individual - Physically
- Emotionally
- Mentally
- Spiritually
13Anything else?
- Patients are encouraged to call their counselor
at anytime during the course of treatment - Patients may participate in the Medication
Assistance Program (MAP) - Patient may participate in Psycho Education (2
formats) Group Therapy and/or Home Study - Patient are encouraged to complete treatment book
activities - Patients are encourage to attend community
support groups (i.e. Nicotine Anonymous)
- Encouraged to call their counselor at any time
- May participate in the Medication Assistance
Program (MAP) - Psycho Education
- Treatment Book Activities
- Community support encouraged
14 Treatment Evaluation
- Aggregate Demographic Report
- Aggregate Co-existing Conditions Report
- Quit rates at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months
- Patient satisfaction telephone survey at 14, 30,
90, 180 and 365 days post enrollment - 210 days post enrollment (MDS 7-month Follow up
Questionnaire)
15(No Transcript)
16Addictions Co-morbidity
17Medical Co-Morbidity
18Mental Health Co-morbidity
19Treatment Quit Rates
- 25.76 (556/2,158) at three months
- 29.45 (529/1,796) at six months
- 30.26 (472/1,560) at nine months
- 27.69 (376/1,358) at twelve months