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Adolescent Substance Abuse

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Young people no longer respect their parents. They are rude and impatient. ... mnemonics and questionnaires: HEADSSS. Refer for specific assessment and testing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adolescent Substance Abuse


1
Adolescent Substance Abuse
  • Anthony Dekker, D.O.
  • SWRSAC 2000

2
  • We live in a decadent age. Young people no
    longer respect their parents. They are rude and
    impatient. They frequent taverns and have no
    self-respect.
  • Inscription on Egyptian tomb
  • circa 3000 B.C.

3
ADOLESCENT SUBSTANCE ABUSE
  • Monitoring the Future Study
  • NIDA, University of MichiganSince 1975, high
    school seniorsSince 1991, also 8th 10th
    graders
  • Those in school use less
  • White seniors use gt Hispanic gt Black
  • Peak drug use late 1970s - 1981

4
SUBSTANCE ABUSE TRENDS1999 MONITORING THE FUTURE
  • 54.7 of seniors had ever used any illicit drug (
    ? 0.6)
  • 25.9 used in past month ( ? 0.3)
  • 43 believe gt 5 drinks 1-2 times a weekend is
    risky (?)
  • 25 believe marijuana use once or twice is risky
    (?)

5
MONITORING THE FUTURE1999 PREVALENCE OF USE
()U.S. HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS
  • Lifetime 30 days Daily
  • Alcohol 80.0 51.0 3.4
  • Cigarettes 64.6 34.6 23.1
  • Smokeless 23.4 8.4 2.9
  • tobacco
  • Marijuana 49.7 23.1 6.0

6
MONITORING THE FUTURE1999 PREVALENCE OF USE
()U.S. HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS
  • Lifetime 30 days Daily
  • Stimulants 16.3 4.5 0.3
  • Inhalants 15.4 2.0 0.2
  • Hallucinogens 13.7 3.5 0.1

7
MONITORING THE FUTURE1999 PREVALENCE OF USE
()U.S. HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS
  • Lifetime 30 days Daily
  • Cocaine 9.8 2.6 0.2
  • Crack 4.6 1.1 0.2
  • Heroin 2.0 0.5 0.1
  • Steroids 2.9 0.9 0.2
  • Barbiturates 8.9 2.6 0.2

8
ANTICIPATORY GUIDANCEFAMILY CONTEXT
  • Childhood parent use and behaviors, attitude,
    parenting, coping styles, family dysfunction,
    prevention efforts
  • Adolescence parent use role-modeling, family
    expectations, permissiveness, tolerance of teen
    use peer group, teen/peer ATOD use
    behaviors HEADSSS

alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs
9
POTENTIAL RISK FACTORSGENETIC AND FAMILY FACTORS
  • Family history of alcoholism, addiction or
    antisocial behavior
  • Family modeling of substance use behaviors
  • Poor parenting skills, family dysfunction
  • Permissive attitude toward teen use
  • ? household conflict, family chaos
  • Child abuse or neglect (physical, sexual)

10
POTENTIAL RISK FACTORSPERSONAL FACTORS
  • ? interest in school and achievement, early
    academic failure
  • ? self-esteem
  • ? religious activity
  • Rebelliousness and social alienation
  • Early antisocial behavior, delinquency
  • Psychopathology, esp. depression
  • Early ? risk behaviors ATOD, sex

11
POTENTIAL RISK FACTORSENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
  • Perceived peer ATOD use, best friend ATOD use
  • Ethnic or cultural influences
  • Community/neighborhood deterioration/
    disorganization
  • Easy access, early access
  • Advertising and media portrayal

12
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS FOR A WIDE RANGE OF
PSYCHOSOCIAL PATHOLOGY ADOLESCENT DYSFUNCTIONS
  • Substance Abuse
  • Depression
  • Other Psychological Issues

13
Maintain privacy and confidentiality
  • Provider-patient-family trust triangle
  • Breach
  • Presents harm to self or others
  • Required by law

14
TRUST RELATIONSHIP
  • Provider
  • privacy
  • communication
  • confidentiality

parent
child/teen
15
SCREENING ASSESSMENT
  • Interview
  • relate and just ask
  • Tools
  • mnemonics and questionnaires
  • HEADSSS
  • Refer for specific assessment and testing

16
URINE DRUG SCREEN
  • Thorough psychosocial history is vital
  • Confidentiality and informed consent
  • Indications
  • identify user for treatment referral
  • monitor drug use while under treatment
  • emergency diagnosis for altered states
  • Random, covert or parent requested testing
  • AAP opposes
  • adversarial, breaches trust and alliance
  • does not identify pattern or dependency

17
URINE DRUG SCREENINSURING ACCURACY
  • Knowledge of techniques, limitations
  • Urine collection under observation
  • Urine temp, pH, specific gravity
  • Legal or forensic
  • confidentiality, chain of command
  • careful labeling, storage
  • confirmatory testing - GC/MS

18
URINE DRUG SCREENDURATION OF DETECTION
  • Anabolic steroids
  • p.o. 4 weeks
  • i.m. 6 weeks
  • Amphetamines/ lt 48 hours
  • methamphetamines
  • Barbiturates
  • short acting 24 hours
  • long acting 2-3 weeks

19
URINE DRUG SCREENDURATION OF DETECTION
  • Cocaine metabolites 2-4 days
  • Inhalants or LSD undetectable
  • Marijuana 3-30 days
  • Methadone 3 days
  • Opiates 2 days
  • Phencyclidine 1 week

20
SYNTHESIS AND PROCESS
  • PATIENT NOT USING
  • Affirm decision not to use
  • Anticipatory guidance
  • PATIENT USING/LOWER RISK
  • State your concern
  • Elicit patients understanding of use. Dispel
    myths
  • Assess readiness to change
  • Negotiate plan and follow up

21
SYNTHESIS AND PROCESS
  • PATIENT USING/HIGHER RISK
  • State your concern
  • Elicit patients understanding of use. Dispel
    myths
  • Assess readiness to change
  • Prepare patient/family for referral
  • Negotiate plan and follow up

22
BRIEF INTERVENTION
  • is an interpersonal interaction whose primary
    impact is motivational, working to trigger a
    decision and commitment to change

23
MOTIVATIONAL INTERVIEWING
  • Pre-contemplation
  • Contemplation
  • Action Plan
  • Implementation
  • Maintenance
  • Recovery
  • Relapse

24
MOTIVATIONAL INTERVIEWING
  • is a particular way to help people recognize and
    do something about their present or potential
    behavioral problems, including AODA use
  • motivates a person to resolve ambivalence and to
    get moving along the path of change

25
PRINCIPLES OFMOTIVATIONAL INTERVIEWING
  • Express empathy
  • Develop discrepancy
  • Avoid argumentation
  • Roll with resistance
  • Support self-efficacy

26
WHEN IS REFERRAL NEEDED?
  • Practitioner uncertain or inexperienced
  • Frequent, regular or compulsive use
  • Concurrent psychopathology
  • Impaired function school, legal, work or social
    (family, peers, etc.)
  • Certain circumstances imminent health risk,
    behavior presents danger to self or others
  • Inability to ? use or maintain abstinence

27
COMMUNITY-BASED INITIATIVES
  • Local chapter of national groups
  • SADD, MADD, NFP, Safe Rides, DARE
  • Focus awareness, education, action
  • positive peer role-modeling
  • promote parent involvement
  • various projects
  • hotlines, safe rides, lobby, media
  • i.e., SADD Contract for Life

28
SUBSTANCE ABUSEGENERAL ISSUES
  • Teens more often abuse multiple drugs
  • smorgasbord vs. drug of choice
  • Multiple drug use/overdose effects are more
    difficult to interpret and treat
  • Street drugs often misrepresented
  • toxic on other than alleged drug
  • overdose represents drug combination

29
SMOKELESS TOBACCOHEALTH CONSEQUENCES
  • Nicotine effects and addiction, gateway drug
  • Teen users more likely to become smokers
  • Leukoplakia various oral cancers gum, mouth,
    pharynx, larynx, esophagus
  • Periodontal disease gingivitis, recession
  • Tooth and filling staining, abrasion of teeth,
    caries, halitosis
  • Hypertension, vasoconstriction

30
CATEGORIES OF INHALANTS
  • Solvents
  • industrial or household
  • art or office supply
  • Gases
  • in household or commercial products
  • household aerosol propellants
  • medical anesthetic gases
  • Nitrites
  • aliphatic nitrites

31
GENERAL INHALANT EFFECTS
  • ACUTE
  • anesthesia, intoxication, quick drunk
  • initial excitement turns to drowsiness
  • disinhibition, lightheaded, agitation, HA
  • ataxia, dizzy, disoriented, dysarthria, weakness,
    nystagmus, loss of consciousness
  • sensitization to endogenous catecholamines

32
GENERAL INHALANT EFFECTS
  • CHRONIC
  • weight loss
  • muscle weakness
  • general disorientation
  • inattentiveness
  • lack of coordination

33
ADVERSE INHALANT EFFECTS
  • IRREVERSIBLE
  • Hearing loss
  • Peripheral neuropathies or limb spasms
  • CNS or brain damage
  • Hematologic dyscrasias

34
ADVERSE INHALANT EFFECTS
  • POTENTIALLY REVERSIBLE
  • Renal toxicity
  • Hepatotoxicity
  • Respiratory distress
  • Hematologic methemoglobenemia

35
INHALANT-ASSOCIATED DEATH
  • Blood oxygen depletion/suffocation
  • Cardiac toxicity ventricular fibrillation,
    arrhythmia, arrest
  • Gastric content aspiration
  • Trauma
  • Nitrite use in HIV may ? risk of Kaposi sarcoma

36
ANDROGENIC ANABOLIC STEROIDS
  • Synthetic derivatives of testosterone po, IM
  • Lay beliefs ? muscular capacity, ? LBM,
  • ? body fat, ? strength/endurance, hastens
    recovery from exercise, allows more frequent and
    higher-intensity workouts
  • Research limited, generally inconclusive
  • Injection adds risks of hepatitis, HIV

37
DIAGNOSING ANABOLICSTEROID USE
  • HISTORY
  • Athletic appearing person, physical or
    psychological complaint
  • Obsessive interest in health, exercise, weight
    lifting
  • School or work difficulties

38
DIAGNOSING ANABOLICSTEROID USE
  • HISTORY
  • Behavior changes aggressiveness (roid rage),
    hyperactivity, irritability, cyclic mood swings,
    anxiety, panic, suicidal ideation, auditory
    hallucination, paranoid/ grandiose delusions

39
DIAGNOSING ANABOLICSTEROID USE
  • HISTORY
  • Drug history denies steroid use consumes
    vitamins, nutritional supplements(Creatine)
    limits other drug use

40
DIAGNOSING ANABOLICSTEROID USE
  • PHYSICAL EXAM
  • Generally muscular
  • Paradoxical lack 2o sex characteristics
  • Female hirsutism, deep and coarse voice, breast
    atrophy, clitoral hypertrophy, acne, male-pattern
    baldness

41
DIAGNOSING ANABOLICSTEROID USE
  • PHYSICAL EXAM
  • Male gynecomastia, testicular atrophy, acne,
    increased male-pattern baldness
  • May complain sore tendons, difficult voiding
  • May find edema, jaundice
  • Adolescents premature virilization with stunted
    growth (epiphyseal closure)

42
ANABOLIC STEROID USEPOSSIBLE LABORATORY EVIDENCE
  • ?HDL, ? LDL and triglycerides
  • ? LH, FSH
  • ? TSH, thyroxin, TBG
  • ? liver enzymes alk phos, LDH, SGOT, SGPT
  • ? glucose
  • ? hematocrit

43
ADVERSE COCAINE EFFECTS
  • Any psychiatric symptoms/disorders anxiety,
    depression, suicidal, paranoid, hallucinations
  • Tremors, muscle twitches, seizures
  • Arrhythmia, MI, CVA, sudden death
  • Nasal congestion, perforated nasal septum
  • Nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain
  • Physical and mental exhaustion
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