Title: Children Suffer From Parental Substance Abuse
1(No Transcript)
2Learning Objectives
- You will be able to
- Describe the substance use continuum
- Cite data on the effectiveness ofscreening and
brief intervention - Conduct screening, intervention, and referral for
women of reproductive age
3NON-PROBUSE
AT-RISKUSE
ABST
ABUSE
DEP
Use Consequences Repetition Loss of control,
preoccupation, compulsivity, physical dependence
- - -
- -
-/ -
4Standard Drink
5At-Risk Drinking
- Per Week Per OccasionMen gt14 drinks gt4 drinks
- Women gt7 drinks gt3 drinks
- Elders gt7 drinks gt1 drink
- Pregnant Any Any
(NIAAA Physicians Guide, 1995)
6NON-PROBUSE
AT-RISKUSE
ABST
ABUSE
DEP
Use Consequences Repetition Loss of control,
preoccupation, compulsivity, physical dependence
- - -
- -
-/ -
7Rationale for Generalist Care
- Risky and problematic substance use is common in
our settings - Most affected people receive no intervention or
treatment - Early identification and intervention can prevent
adverse effects, improve other health outcomes,
and save money
8Generalist Care for Substance Use Related
Disorders
Screen if positive, perform brief assessment
Abstinence or low-risk use
At-risk use or abuse
Dependence
Refer to treatment
Prevention message
Brief intervention
Motivational Interviewing
Follow-Up
9Evidence on Screening
- Screening instruments are often tested by
concurrent validity - Screen is compared to a gold standard criterion
measure - Gold standard is usually a lengthy diagnostic
interview
10Definition of Screening
- Procedure to recognizeindividuals with a
disorder or at-risk for a disorderbefore obvious
manifestationsof the disorder are apparent. - Examples
- Cancer and depression
11Choose Screens By ...
- Number of items
- Method of administration
- Substances covered
- Accuracy by age group, gender, pregnancy status,
ethnic group
12AUDIT
- 10 questions - multiple choice
- Administered in writing
- Alcohol only
- Screens for at-risk drinking, abuse, and
dependence - Accurate across many cultures/nations
- Sens 51 - 97 Spec 78 - 96
13CAGE
- 4 yes/no questions (1 yes positive)
- Administered by interview
- Alcohol only
- Screens for abuse and dependence
- Add quantity and frequency questions to screen
for at-risk drinking - Sens 43 - 94 Spec 78 - 96
14CRAFFT
- 6 yes/no questions (2 yeses positive)
- Administered by interview
- Alcohol and drugs
- Validated for adolescents
- Sens 92 Spec 82
15Two-Item Conjoint Screen
- 2 yes/no questions (1 yes positive)
- Administered by interview
- Covers alcohol and drugs
- Screens for abuse and dependence
- Add quantity and frequency questions to screen
for at-risk use - Sens 81 Spec 81
16TWEAK
- 5 questions
- Administered by interview
- Covers alcohol only
- Screens for abuse and dependence for pregnant
women - Sens 59 - 87 Spec 72 - 94
17TWEAK
- Tolerance
- Worry
- Eye-Opener
- Amnesia
- K (C)ut down
18 Q/F Questions on Alcohol
- How many days a week do you drink some alcohol?
- How much do you typically drink when you do
drink? - Whats the most youve had to drink at one time
in the past 3 months?
19Other Questions to Consider
- Have you ever tried or experimented with-
Marijuana? - Inhalants?- Cocaine? - Pills?-
Shooting Up? - Any other drugs? - Days per week, usual quantity, maximum
- Have you ever gotten any help for an alcohol or
drug problem?
20Transitions to Screening
- Routine questions
- Tie into pt's/client's concern.
- Questions on preventive health
- Family medical or social history
- Diet history
- Leisure activities
- Stresses and ways of coping
21Sample Adult Screening Protocol
- Transition Stresses and ways of coping
- Do you drink alcohol?
- Have you ever experimented with any drugs?
- Ask TWEAK questions
- Ask Q/F questions on alcohol
- Usually takes less than one minute
22Non-Verbal Cues
- Interpret significant changes in a patient's/
client's non-verbal cues as a positive screen for
abuse or dependence - Eye contact
- Fluidity and tone of speech
- Posture
- Movements
- Affect
23For Especially Sensitive Situations
- Ask about friends first
- Ask about prior use first
- Make normalizing statements before asking
questions
24Screen Results and Actions
- Abstinence (ask why) Prevention message
- Low-risk drinker Prevention message
- At-risk drinker or Briefdrug user with
other- interventionwise negative screen - Positive screen for abuse Briefor
dependence assessment
25Prevention Messages
- Brief
- Relevant information
- Culturally appropriate
- Reinforcing
26NON-PROBUSE
AT-RISKUSE
ABST
ABUSE
DEP
Use Consequences Repetition Loss of control,
preoccupation, compulsivity, physical dependence
- - -
- -
-/ -
27Definition of Assessment
- A process intended to identify precisely a
patients category of substance use on the
continuum
28Assessment Tools
- Alcohol levels and drug tests
- Tests for excessive alcohol use - liver function
tests, blood counts - Physical examination
- Collateral report
- Self-report
29Self-Report
- Interview is usually the most accurate source of
information - Accurate assessment is usually possible even with
minimization - Appropriate assessment techniques can build
rapport
30Brief Assessment Interview
- Consequences and repetition
- Physical dependence and loss of control
- Quantity and frequency
31Later Consequences
- Cirrhosis, cardiomyopathy, AIDS, chronic
pancreatitis, CAD, cancer - Severe neuropsychiatric disorders
- Family dissolution, social isolation
- Unemployment, homelessness
- Incarceration
- Oral cancers and tooth loss
32Earlier Consequences
Identify problem before irreversible consequences
- Psychological
- Family
- Friends
- Biomedical
33Early Consequences Psychological
- Earliest category of consequences
- Dysphoria, depression, or anxiety
- Irritability, mood swings, hostility
- Paranoia, psychosis
- Any psychiatric symptom can be related to
intoxication, overdose, or withdrawal
34Early ConsequencesFamily
- Marital/family dysfunction
- Childhood behavior/school problems
- Mental health problems and somatic symptoms among
family members
35Early ConsequencesFriends
- Alienation and loss of old friends
- Gravitation toward others who use substances
heavily
36Early ConsequencesBiomedical
- Gastritis, peptic ulcer, pancreatitis, vague
abdominal pain, diarrhea - Hypertension
- Weight gain for alcohol
- Weight loss for cocaine and amphetamines
- Sleep and sexual dysfunction
- Unplanned pregnancies, unwanted sexual advances,
STD's - Periodontal disease
37Early ConsequencesInjuries
- Assaults
- Domestic violence/family violence
- Other interpersonal violence
- Motor vehicle related
- Motor vehicle crashes
- Pedestrian motor vehicle crashes
- Falls
- Fires
- Swimming/boating related
- Suicide attempts
- Injuries in the home
- Repeated injury events
38Early ConsequencesWork/School
- Frequent lateness and absences
- Requests for work excuses
- Decline in performance
- Frequent job changes
Preservation of function for highly
motivatedindividuals, such as many health care
professionals
39Early ConsequencesLegal
- Domestic and other violence
- Arrests for disturbing the peace
- DWIs / DUIs
- Arrests for possession and dealing
- Burglary, robbery
40 Early ConsequencesFinancial
- Spending more than one can afford on obtaining
substances - Financial strain
- Indebtedness
- Selling possessions
41Brief Assessment Interview
- Consequences and repetition
- Physical dependence and loss of control
- Quantity and frequency
42Brief Assessment Interview (continued)
- Loss of control
- Setting rules about substance use
- Having difficulty adhering to rules
- Physical dependence
- Withdrawal symptoms
- Substance use to avoid withdrawal
- Tolerance
43Brief Assessment Interview (continued)
- Consequences and repetition
- Physical dependence and loss of control
- Quantity and frequency
44Brief Assessment Interview (continued)
- How many days a week do you drink some alcohol?
- How much do you typically drink at one time when
you do drink? - Whats the most youve had to drink at one time
in the past 3 months? - Take responses at face value
45Other Important Concerns
- Cultural Competence
- Dual Diagnosis
46Cultural Competence Review
- Increased concern for cultural competence among
all health care disciplines. - Impetus concern for adequacy of services for
members of minority groups. - Flexible changing process.
- Each person is unique within their culture.
47Dual Diagnosis
- Co-existing substance use disorder and another
psychiatric disorder - Identify primary and secondary disorder, if
possible - If SUD may be primary, and if psychiatric
symptoms are not pressing, try abstinence without
medications
48Conventional Explanatory Model
1
2
Psychological Symptom
Stressful Circumstances
3
Substance Use
49Another Possible Model
1
2
Psychological Symptom
Stressful Circumstances
3
Substance Use
50Another Possible Model (continued)
PsychologicalDisorder
Stressful Circumstances
Substance Use Disorder
Cycle can start anywhere
51Evidence on Brief Interventions
- Intervention - up to 15 minutes of dialogue with
up to 3 follow-up sessions - Feedback
- Responsibility
- Advice
- Menu
- Empathy
- Self-efficacy
52Evidence on Brief Interventions (continued)
- Several randomized controlled trials
- Subjects at-risk and problem drinkers
- Control subjects improved - screening and
assessment can elicit behavior change - Experimental subjects improved more
- Statistically significant differences in
- Self-reported Q/F
- Liver inflammation
- Attendance at work
- Days in hospitals
- Costs of health care, car crashes and criminal
justice
53Evidence on Brief Interventions (continued)
- Per subject
- Costs savings in health care,car crashes,
criminal justice 1146 - Cost of screening/intervention 250
- Net cost savings 946
Fleming et al, Medical Care, 2000.
54Evidence on Treatment
- Consider SUDs as chronic relapsing and remitting
conditions - Abstinence is not the sole criterion for
evaluating effectiveness of treatment - Other criteria for effectiveness are less
substance use, better function, improved quality
and duration of life
55Evidence on Treatment (continued)
- Effective for those who commonly receive them
- Inpatient outpatient alcohol treatment
- Naltrexone for alcohol dependence (short-term)
- Opioid maintenance treatment
- Long-term residential drug treatment
56BI/Referral - Principles
- Feedback
- Responsibility
- Advice
- Menu of options
- Empathy
- Self-efficacy
57BI/Referral - Steps
- Feedback
- Education
- Recommendation
- Negotiation
- Secure agreement
- Set follow-up
58Feedback
- Summarize negative consequences
- Describe relevant risks
- Raise concern about substance use
- Seek reaction
- Listen and acknowledge
- Explain how their use compares to norms
59Education
- Educate about how substance use is linked to
consequence or risk - Assess prior knowledge and
- culturally linked perceptions
- Assess interest in information
- Convey information
- Assess understanding
60Initial Recommendations
- For at-risk use or abuse
- For family history abstinence
- For family history low-risk use
- For pregnancy abstinence
- For dependence
- Abstinence
- Referral to specialist/treatment
61Negotiation
- Listen and acknowledge response
- If recommendation is resisted
- Ask about interest in change
- Suggest further change if risks or consequences
will continue - Identify and help remove barriers to change
- Accept decision support any change
62Secure Agreement
- Ensure specificity and concreteness
- Record agreement for client/pt and practitioner
- Express optimism and support
- Suggest use of drinking or substance using diary
- Give warning about withdrawal symptoms
63Set Follow-Up
- Suggest follow-up at one month
- Offer follow-up sooner
- Emphasize desire for follow-up regardless of
progress - Reassure about lack of anger and judgment if
pt/client has difficulty - Make statement of partnership
64Follow-Up
- Assess progress after intervention
- Reassess if necessary consequences, dependence,
Q/F - Make recommendation
- Negotiate
- Secure agreement set follow-up
65At Follow-Up, If No Better
- Use motivational interviewing, OR
- for dependence
- Recommend referral, continue discussing over time
- For abuse or at-risk use
- Continue discussing over time
- Consider specialized assessment or consultation
66Watch for Dual Diagnosis
- Continuation of symptoms despite decreased use
- Unmasking of new psychiatric symptoms
67Documentation
- Advantages
- Reminder to attendto issue in future
- Useful informationfor colleagues
- Documents qualityof care
- May facilitate reimbursement
- Disadvantages
- Colleagues/staff may be judgmental
- Breaches of confidentiality
- Legal, economic, and social ramifications
- Insurance issues
68Documentation (continued)
- Possible Ramifications
- Subpoena
- Insurance applications
- Child custody decisions
- Mandatory or optional reporting of pregnant
substance users may lead to imprisonment and/or
forced treatment in some states
69Principles of Documentation
- Practitioner owns record patient/client owns
information - Written permission required to release records
(except when life is at risk) - Federal confidentiality law
- Must have specific permission to release
information on substance abuse, mental health,
HIV/AIDS, and STDs - Must include effective and expiration dates and
purpose of information release
70Implementation
- Training alone is minimally effective in changing
practitioner behavior - Bolster training with
- Directives
- Peer consensus
- Incentives
- Reminders
- Team approaches
- Systemization
- CQI
71Summary
- All generalist health professionals should
screen, intervene, and refer - Intervene and refer using FRAMES FERNSS
- Follow-up
- Document with care
- Consider implementation issues