Title: GHB
1NIDA
Bringing the full power of Science to bear on
2Topics
- Drug Abuse The Big Picture
- The Science of Addiction
- Key Intervention Concepts
- Implementing Science into Practice
3Illicit Drug Use Disorders Are COMMONLifetime
and 12-Month Rates Among Adults 18 Y.O. in the
U.S.
NIAAA National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol
and Related Conditions, 2006
4Drug Use Has Been Declining Since 1990s
Student Past Year Use of An Illicit Drug
Denotes significant difference between recent
peak year and current year.
5Sedative Use Has Been Increasing 12th Grader
Past Year Use of Sedatives
Denotes significant increase 2001-2005.
6Prescription Opioid Abuse is Alarming
Percent of 12th Grade Students Reporting Past
Year Nonmedical Use of Vicodin OxyContin
Note year-to-year differences are not
statistically significant, but 2002 to 2005 is
higher for OxyContin.
Source Monitoring the Future, University of
Michigan
7Methamphetamine Has Been A MAJOR Issue in Many
Parts of the USA
8Treatment Admission Rates per 100,000
9Treatment Admission Rates per 100,000
10Universal Family-based Prevention Interventions
Reduce Methamphetamine
11The Science of Addiction
12Biological Factors Interact with Environmental
Factors to Produce Addiction
Biology/Genes
Biology/ Environment Interaction
Environment
DRUG
Addiction
13So What Does All This Mean for Drug Abuse Service
Delivery?
14 Outcome In Diabetes
Pre - During - Post
Treatment Research Institute
15 Outcome In Hypertension
Pre - During - Post
Treatment Research Institute
16 Outcome In Addiction
Pre - Post
Treatment Research Institute
17 If we treat a diabetic and symptoms dont
subside.what do we do?
Would we increase the dose? Would we change
medications? Would we change treatment
approaches? Would we fail to provide ongoing
treatment for a diabetic?
18We need to shift the paradigm of addiction
treatment from an acute to a chronic care model
19Substance Use Careers Last for Decades
1.0
.9
.8
Cumulative Survival
Years from first use to 1 years abstinence
.7
Median duration of 27 years!
.6
.5
.4
.3
.2
.1
0.0
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Scott, Dennis, Funk (1998)
20Treatment Careers Last for Years
1.0
.9
.8
Cumulative Survival
Years from first Tx to 1 years abstinence
.7
Median duration of 9 years and 3-4 episodes of
care
.6
.5
.4
.3
.2
.1
0.0
25
20
15
10
5
0
Scott, Dennis, Funk (1998)
21Substance Use Careers are Shorter the Sooner
People get to Treatment
Year to 1st Tx Groups
1.0
.9
.8
Cumulative Survival
Years from first use to 1 years abstinence
.7
20
.6
.5
.4
.3
10-19
.2
.1
0.0
0-9
plt.05 (different from 20)
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Scott, Dennis, Funk (1998)
22Recovery from drug addiction requires effective
treatment followed by management of the disorder
over time.
Chronic Disease Model
Initial Services
Clinical Practices
Engage Sustain
Assessment
Therapeutic Interventions
23Recovery Management Checkups Faster return to
treatment and improved long-term outcomes
24Under Construction
For Criminal Justice Involved Individuals
25In-Prison Treatment Plus Post-Release Aftercare
Improve 5 Year Outcomes in Prison Addicts
Participants 80 African American
AFTERCARE is Indispensable
Arrest-Free
Drug-Free
p lt .05 from Comparison
Martin, Butzin, Saum, Inciardi (2004), Crime and
Delinquency
26CJ System Replete with Addiction Access to
Medications is Needed
Maryland Prison Study Treatment Linkage and
Opiate-Free One Month Post Release (N100)
C Counseling Only CT Counseling
Treatment Referral CM Counseling Methadone
Started in Prison
Preliminary Analysis Tim Kinlock, et al., 2006
27Medications to Keep an Eye On
- Disulfiram (cocaine)
- Topiramate (alcohol, cocaine, nicotine)
- Marinol rimonabant (marijuana)
- Bupropion Vigabatrin, Topiramate, Modafinil
(methamphetamine) - Depot (injection) naltrexone (opiate, alcohol)
28The Consequences of Drug Abuse and Addiction
Disproportionately Affect Minority Populations
100
1
4
6
12
15
23
80
11
16
60
50
40
70
65
20
26
0
Population
White
Black
Hispanic
Other
Sources 2002 NSDUH, DHHS, SAMHSA, 2003.
CDC HIV/AIDS Surveillance
Report 2002.
29HIV Screening as Cost-Effective as Screening for
Colon Cancer and Other Conditions How can this
apply to CJ and other at-risk populations?
30Implementing Science into Practice
31Adoption of Innovations in Substance Abuse
Treatment of Facilities (N766) Reporting Use
of Selected Interventions
Source Roman et al., National Treatment Center
Study data
32Adoption of Innovation Potential Impact of CTN
Protocol Participation
P N.S.
P lt .05
Source Ducharme et al., JSAT, In press.
33Whats NIDA Doing About This?
34Braiding Funding Streams
- Adolescent Services Including Brief Interventions
(FY2003 with SAMHSA) - Assessment and Brief Interventions in Primary
Care (FY2004 with SAMHSA) - NIDA Funding Research on CSAPs National SPF-SIG
Program (FY2004) - Service to Science Grants (with SAMHSA) for State
Substance Abuse Authorities (FY2005) and
Community Based Organizations (FY2006)
35Testing the Communities That Care (CTC)
Prevention System
Research Centers
Coordinating Center
36Clinical Trials NetworkState GrantsAddiction
Technology Transfer Centers
37Priority Areas for NIDA
Prevention Research (Children and Adolescents)
Treatment Interventions (New Targets
New Strategies)
HIV/AIDS Research
38NIDA
Bringing the full power of Science to bear on