
|
 |
 |
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TIPS
& TOPICS from David Mee-Lee, M.D.
Volume
3, No.1
April
2005
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In
this issue
-- SAVVY
-- SKILLS
-- SOUL
-- Until Next Time
Welcome readers!
In April 2003, the very first edition of TIPS and TOPICS
"rolled off the presses". It is hard to believe that
this edition starts our third year. Thanks for reading
all those months and if you are a new subscriber, welcome
to what is becoming perhaps an "institution".
|
|
SAVVY
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM)
had its annual Medical Scientific meeting this month.
I attended a symposium on the challenges of implementing
screening for alcohol and substance abuse and brief intervention
in primary care settings. There is increased interest
in, and focus on integrating addiction and mental health
services; as well as behavioral health into primary care
settings.
Here is some interesting and relevant SAVVY I gleaned
from that symposium.
Tips:
- Remember the 4A's for Alcohol Screening and
Brief Intervention
Step 1: Ask about alcohol use - brief screening
questions
Step 2: Assess - brief assessment to determine
the severity of the problems and the appropriate action
Step 3: Advise and Assist - brief intervention
to advise to cut down or abstain; and to set goals
Step 4: Arrange follow-up - monitor the patient's
progress
I
had not heard about the National Institute on Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) "one question" approach
to screening: What is the maximum number of drinks
you had on any given day in the past month?
For men - more than 4 drinks on any one day- and for
women - more than 3- means that the client may be at
risk for developing alcohol-related problems. If below
those cutoffs, screening can stop here unless the person
is:
-->Pregnant or trying to conceive (they need advice
to abstain) or
-->Over age 65, frail, or taking medications that interact
with alcohol. (They may experience problems at lower
drinking levels, thus may need advice to cut down, as
described in Step 3)
-->Other drinkers below the cutoffs may benefit from
reminders that no drinking level is risk free, and any
drinking can impair driving tasks.
Statistics:
Nearly one third of U.S. adults engage in risky drinking
patterns, and thus need advice to cut down, or a referral
for further evaluation. 12% of U.S. adults aged 18 years
or older never have more than 4 (men) or 3 (women) drinks
on any one day; and have less than 1 in 100 chance of
having an alcohol use disorder. But even occasionally
(less than once a week) men having 5 or more drinks,
or women 4 or more drinks in any one day increases the
chance of an alcohol disorder to 1 in 14 - that's a
7% chance versus just 1%.
There are other approaches to screening and many screening
instruments. But the bottom line is that you can gain
important information to intervene and give brief advice
even from just one question. That is a good start to
screening for healthcare and mental health professionals.
Reference and Resource:
This information, along with a lot more detail, is in
"Helping Patients with Alcohol Problems - A Health Practitioner's
Guide". The document can be downloaded in its original
graphic format. (PDF) at www.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/Practitioner/HelpingPatients-text.htm
For Written Request:
Orders for Helping Patients With Alcohol Problems:
A Health Practitioner's Guide and the Pocket Guide
can be placed by writing to NIAAA:
Mailing Address:
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
Publications Distribution Center
P.O. Box 10686
Rockville, MD 20849-0686
Cost: FREE
- Brief interventions of 5 to 15 minutes can
be effective. Peer interventions can make it even
more effective.
Dr Richard Blondell of the Department of Family Medicine
in Buffalo, New York reminded us of what you have probably
observed also.
--> It is hard to get healthcare professionals to ask
even one screening question, and to do a brief intervention
no matter how effective it has been shown to be.
--> Most professionals are inadequately prepared and
require significant training to implement SBI.
--> It is expensive to have a consultation team, and
often difficult to make a referral to addiction treatment
even if the patient in a hospital is willing to pursue
treatment.
Dr.
Blondell's study
He told the audience of a study conducted in Louisville,
Kentucky.
The question was asked: Can recovering alcoholics help
hospitalized patients with alcohol problems?
The researchers evaluated the relative effectiveness
of two approaches for patients with alcohol problems.
Three groups of patients were compared. One group
had no brief intervention and got usual hospital care.
This was the control group. The second group had a 5-
to 15-minute physician-delivered message (brief intervention);
and the third study group got the physician message
plus a 30- to 60-minute visit by a recovering alcoholic
(peer intervention). Telephone follow-up obtained up
to 12 months after hospital discharge focused on patient
behaviors during the first 6 months following discharge.
A "Hospital Angel Program" was developed where volunteer
peers in recovery visited with hospitalized patients.
This was an alternative to an expensive, labor-intensive
addiction consultation service. The study included 314
patients with alcohol-related injuries admitted to an
urban teaching hospital. Researchers measured complete
abstinence from alcohol during the entire 6 months following
hospital discharge, abstinence from alcohol during the
sixth month following hospital discharge, and initiation
of alcohol treatment or self-help within 6 months of
hospital discharge.
Results of the Study:
Valid responses were obtained from 140 patients (45%).
Observed success rates were: 34%, 44%, and 59% (P=.012)
for abstinence from alcohol since discharge in the usual
care group, the brief intervention group, and the peer
intervention group, respectively; 36%, 51%, and 64%
(P=.006) for abstinence at the sixth month following
hospital discharge; and 9%, 15%, and 49% (P <.001) for
initiation of treatment/self-help. During the telephone
follow-up interview, several patients in the "Hospital
Angels" peer intervention group expressed gratitude
for the help they received with their drinking problems
while in the hospital. A few patients dramatically changed
their lives. They went from being unemployed and homeless
to full-time employment and having a permanent residence.
They credited the peer intervention as being the most
important factor that motivated them to seek help for
their alcohol use disorder. One of these individuals
serves as a volunteer, visiting hospitalized patients
with drinking problems.
Bottom Line:
Harnessing the power of consumers and other people
in recovery along with professional interventions can
not only improve effectiveness, but use resources wisely.
Reference:
Blondell RD, Looney SW, Northington AP, Lasch ME, Rhodes
SB, McDaniels RL.: "Can recovering alcoholics help hospitalized
patients with alcohol problems?" J Family Practice 2001
May;50(5):447.
|
|
SKILLS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To supplement the screening and brief interventions
SAVVY above, consider these SKILLS:
Tips:
- Ask "How much?" and "How often?" questions,
rather than "Do you?" or "Have you?" questions
When screening for or assessing substance use disorders,
clients may well be reluctant to be open about substance
use for which they have endured nagging, arrests, family
problems in a society that still stigmatizes addiction
illness. In a monotone, routine, matter-of-fact, "I-ask-everyone-these-
questions" manner, try asking:
-->
"How much do you drink a day?" rather than "Do you drink
alcohol?"
--> "How often in a week do you get into family fights
over alcohol or other drugs?" rather than "Have you
had any family arguments over drinking or drugging?"
-->"How many times have you lost jobs or gotten into
legal problems with alcohol or other drugs?" rather
than "Have you ever lost a job or been arrested over
drinking or drugging?"
If you want a screening instrument that asks questions
more in this kind of manner, take a look at the Alcohol
Use Disorders Identification Test: Interview Version
Resource:
Go to the World Health Organization website, www.who.org,
and search on AUDIT. You will get to:. http://whqlibdoc.who.int/hq/2001/WHO_MSD_MSB_01
.6a.pdf.
- If the client seems particularly cautious,
try putting down your pen and paper.
One of the speakers at the symposium suggested something
I'd never thought of before. He wants to create as open
an environment as possible to allow the client to be
as honest as possible. So before he asks questions about
substance use, he deliberately and purposively closes
the chart, places it on the desk, puts away his pen,
and turns to the patient with his back to the medical
record or computer. Rather than asking substance use
questions with pen poised over the assessment form,
the clinician communicates the clear message: "I am
not recording every word." This helps the client feel
safer to open up.
I can think of some problems with that, but it is
a tip that he certainly finds clinically useful and
you may too.
- Get used to listing quickly the various drug
classes so you jog the client's memory.
If you ask a client do they use drugs, they may be
thinking only of illicit drugs. If you ask a client
what is the longest time they have been sober, they
may think that being on Percodan and Xanax doesn't count.
So it is good to get in the habit of asking:
--> "What drugs do you use? And I mean what uppers,
downers, sleeping pills, pain pills, tranquilizers,
alcohol, nicotine, over the counter drugs, other illegal
drugs?"
-->"What is the longest time you have been totally drug-free?
And I mean when you haven't been doing uppers, downers,
sleeping pills, pain pills, tranquilizers, alcohol,
nicotine, over the counter drugs, other illegal drugs?"
Many clients have not had any significant time when
they were totally drug-free. That can be helpful to
know, especially if you are trying to assess the difference
between a substance use disorder, a substance-induced
disorder, or a co-occurring mental disorder.
|
|
SOUL
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It has been nearly nine years now that I have
been doing training and consulting full-time. I am committed
to what I do and enjoy it. But there is no perfect job,
and the air travel part of this job sometimes messes up
my "commute". Today's experience reminded me why I appreciate
the Serenity Prayer so much.
All was going well. I got my free first class upgrade.
Even though the security line was long, I arrived at
the gate ready to board the plane in good time. Everything
was on track for my connection in Denver, to then arrive
at a civilized time in New Jersey. You can perhaps relate
to what happened next: weather problems around Denver
International Airport; diversion to Colorado Springs
for refueling; Denver airport closed; late arrival;
missed connection-----will I make it to Atlantic City
to present the plenary session first thing the next
day?
Just being late is no big deal, but to mess up a conference
and hundreds of people would not be pretty. In my anxiety
to get going, I could feel the stress and impatience
rising fast - the pilot wasn't giving enough timely
information; the refueling was taking too long. Why
can't the weather change? Can we beat the approaching
thunderstorm? Why aren't there more flights to reassure
me that I would get there in time?
God, grant me the serenity to accept the things
I cannot change---
I can't remember the last time I was able to change
the weather; or the flight schedules; or the last time
I got a person to give me information they don't have.
Courage to change the things I can---
Like someone once said: "In my life I've had thousands
of worries and one or two of them even came true". It's
hard to change a worrywart. One call to the airline
got me "protected" on a later flight. I would make it,
even if I missed my connection.
The wisdom to know the difference---
Old Chinese proverb: The wise man learns from the
mistakes of others. The foolish man learns from his
own mistakes. Thanks to everyone who has made the mistake
of forgetting the Serenity Prayer. I nearly made the
same mistake again today.
|
|
Until
Next Time
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Again, welcome to Year 3 of TIPS and TOPICS. Please
join me in May and the rest of the year.
David
|
|
Contact Information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
phone: 530-753-4300
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|