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Outline Toward the Treatment of Co-Occurring Conditions: Multiple Condition Care • The Problem as Semantics – The Problem from the CD Care Perspective – The Problem from the MI Care Perspective • The Problem as Prevalence and Incidence • What To Do: The Basics of Multiple Condition Care • Meeting Objections • Mental Illness and Types of Drugs • How To Begin? G. Scott Schleifer, Ed.D., L.P. Anoka Metro Regional Treatment Center March 2005 1 March 2005 2 The Problem as Semantics The Problem • Traditionally, the treatment of mental illness and chemical dependency have taken place in separate settings, using different models of care. • The treatment of mental illness is rooted in medicine, and the lead provider is a psychiatrist or psychologist. • The treatment of chemical dependency has intentionally non-professional roots, and the lead provider often is a peer or a counselor. • A large number of clients arriving for services have problems of both mental illness and substance abuse. • These people need something that can address both of these conditions. • Traditional MI/CD care always has had a stronger focus on one or the other areas; either the MI or CD was treated, with the other condition “tacked on,” almost as an afterthought depending on where the client entered the care delivery system. March 2005 March 2005 3 4 The Problem From the CD Care Perspective The Problem from the MI Care Perspective • In the early days of the Alcoholics Anonymous movement (and the similar self help organizations that followed) chemically dependent people who were themselves recovering, formed the overwhelming majority of those providing care. • Recovering individuals often did not trust professionals to understand their addiction or even to have their best interest at heart. • Tradition Number 8 of Alcoholics Anonymous states that AA “…should remain forever nonprofessional…” (emphasis added). • Mental health care has evolved from a medicallybased model of illness to a discipline that also incorporates social learning and behavioral control perspectives. • Substance abuse has been seen as attempts at selfmedication, or as having psychodynamic causes (such as thanatogenic urges) that underlie it. • Mental health care providers are professionals, who sometimes disparage self help models; some look at AA as “ritual substitution.” March 2005 5 March 2005 6 1 Commonalities Between Mental Illness and Chemical Dependency Language Has Been Recognized (Minkoff) These Competing Viewpoints Have Resulted In • Split care delivery systems in terms of diagnostic criteria, etiological understanding, funding streams, and different regulatory environments. • Seemingly irreconcilable philosophies if not necessarily the methodologies. • Mutual suspiciousness of the other system, and lack of acceptance/respect for peers and counterparts. March 2005 7 ALCOHOLISM/ADDICTION A biological illness. Hereditary (in part). Chronicity Incurability Leads to lack of control of behavior and emotions 6. Affects the whole family 7. Symptoms can be controlled with proper treatment 8. Progression of the disease without treatment 9. Disease of denial 10. Facing the disease can to lead to depression and despair. 11. Disease is often seen as a “moral issue,” due to personal weakness rather than biological causes 12. Feelings of guilt and failure 2005 of shame and stigma 13.March Feelings 14. Physical, mental, and spiritual disease 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. A biological illness. Hereditary (in part). Chronicity Incurability Leads to lack of control of behavior and emotions Affects the whole family Symptoms can be controlled with proper treatment Progression of the disease without treatment Disease of denial Facing the disease can to lead to depression and despair. Disease is often seen as a “moral issue,” due to personal weakness rather than biological causes Feelings of guilt and failure 8 Feelings of shame and stigma Physical, mental, and spiritual disease There Also Are Marked Differences in Philosophical Orientations But the Different Language and Perception Remains Psychiatry/Psychology Calls It Care Resistance Symptom substitution Social learning Adjustment/learning Pygmalianism, Redintigration, Thanatopsis MAJOR MENTAL ILLNESS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. (From Minkoff) Mental Health Community Chemical Dependency Calls It ∆ Treatment ∆ Denial ∆ Cross addiction ∆ Enabling ∆ Recovery ∆ Self-Defeating, Scripting, Addictive Personality • Medical/Professional Model • Scientific Treatment • Medication • Deinstitutionalization Ideology • Substance use is secondary to psychopathology March 2005 9 The Problem as Prevalence and Incidence Chemical Health Community • • • • • Peer Counselor Model Spiritual Recovery Self-Help Recovery Ideology Psychopathology is secondary to addiction These can form barriers to integrated treatment March 2005 10 Overlap of Mental Illness and Substance Use Disorders • Generally accepted that having a mental illness increases the risk of a substance use disorder • Having an addictive disorder multiplies the risk of a worsening mental illness: Non-addictive Psychiatric Disorders Substance Use Disorders – Even though the mental illness usually precedes the substance use disorder – As therapeutic medications become replaced by addictive substances or chemicals of abuse March 2005 11 March 2005 12 2 The Problem as Prevalence and Incidence The Problem as Phenomenology Lehman identified a number of complicating factors in the dual diagnosis population: 1. Acute and chronic substance use can produce psychiatric symptoms 2. Substance withdrawal can cause psychiatric symptoms 3. Substance use can mask psychiatric symptoms 4. Psychiatric disorders can mimic symptoms associated with substance use 5. Acute and chronic substance use can exacerbate psychiatric disorders 6. Acute and chronic psychiatric disorders can exacerbate the recovery process from addictive disorders • Individuals with multiple conditions are more likely to seek or be committed to treatment than those with single disorders • A large proportion – at AMRTC it’s about 70% – of individuals receiving inpatient care are both mentally ill and abusing substances when they are admitted March 2005 13 March 2005 The Problem as Phenomenology The Problem as Phenomenology This leads to: • Increased vulnerability to relapse and repeated hospitalization • More florid psychotic symptoms • Inability to manage finances and live independently • Housing instability and homelessness • Noncompliance with medications and treatment • Increased vulnerability to HIV infection and hepatitis, as well as less lethal opportunistic diseases March 2005 15 So, What to Do: The Basics of Multiple Condition Care March 2005 16 So, What to Do: The Basics of Multiple Condition Care • • • • Integrated treatment Individualized treatment planning Assertiveness Close monitoring Longitudinal perspective Harm reduction Stages of change Stable living situation Cultural competency and consumer centeredness Optimism March 2005 Multiple conditions often produce: • Lower satisfaction with familial relationships • Lowered ability to sustain social relationships • Increased family burden • Increased risk of violence, either committed or received • Increased risk of incarceration • Increased depression and suicidality (often accompanied by episodes of SIB and parasuicidality) • Higher service utilization and costs Principles Identified by Sciacca and Others Principles identified by Schultz and Others • • • • • • • • • • 14 • • • • • • 17 Integrated (versus collaborative) treatment Engagement of all clients to the extent possible Non-theory-dependent screening Differentiation of persons with multiple disorder and identification of their service needs Assessment of client readiness and adjustment to care accordingly Educated, cross-trained providers Acceptance, empathy and non-confrontation Continuity of care extends into the entire community Outcome measures for staff Support for family and friends of the patient March 2005 18 3 So, What to Do: The Basics of Multiple Condition Care Principles identified by Minkoff (broad overview) • Integration is common to all approaches. Whenever disciplines work separately, something falls short. Likewise, consultative models create inequities and holes in the system. • Stabilization of the active symptoms is essential for any further progress. The argument over what disease is primary often takes place over this issue. Stabilization across conditions is needed. • Engagement must be developed as the client becomes stable in his/her presentation. • PHASE 1: Stabilization - Stabilization of active substance use or acute psychiatric symptoms • PHASE 2: Engagement/Motivational Enhancement - Engagement in treatment - Contemplation, Preparation, Persuasion • PHASE 3: Prolonged Stabilization - Active treatment, Maintenance, Relapse Prevention • PHASE 4: Recovery & Rehabilitation - Continued sobriety and stability - One year - ongoing Note: Dr. Minkoff has a detailed implementation system that this summary does not capture. March 2005 19 Creating a Common System March 2005 20 Creating a Common System • Assertive Care and Monitoring is referenced by many systems using those words, and others indirectly. It takes active treatment a step farther, going to the client’s own world, when necessary. In practice, this follows a continuum from response to pagers to ACT teams. • Long Term Perspective is necessary at all levels of care. Defining success or failure in the short term is risky at best, and often is demoralizing and self defeating. • Truly Individualized Treatment Planning – Evaluate and assess most pressing needs – Determine motivation/ability to address substance use/mental health problems – Select target behaviors for change – Determine interventions to achieve desired goals – Choose measures to evaluate the intervention – Select follow-up times to review the plan. March 2005 Creating A Common System 21 March 2005 22 Creating a Common System Creating a Common System • Harm Reduction is a natural consequence of taking a long term perspective. Minkoff has discussed the role of wet and damp houses in the continuum of care, for example. And the Harm Reduction model can be found – albeit often disguised – in “main stream” CD treatment with mood stabilizing medication, for example. • Cross Trained Providers are essential to any comprehensive system of multiple condition care. CD professionals must understand the role of mental illness, and the medications involved in treating that illness. Mental health professionals must truly view their CD colleagues as peers, and have respect and understanding for the addictive urges and relapses the client faces. March 2005 23 March 2005 24 4 Creating a Common System Creating a Common System • Extended Support both for the client, and for the family and friends, as well as extending the continuity of care into the community. This includes: – – – – • Feedback and Evaluation should be built into the system. Staff need to see what they do well and where they can do better so that feedback is an opportunity for growth and not a source of threat. • Hope and Optimism should be evident for both clients and staff. Stable living situation Availability of psychiatric care Availability of CD recovery support Support in finances and work March 2005 25 March 2005 26 Staffing an Integrated Team Staffing an Integrated Team (SAMHSA Recommended) The following should be included in the team: • • • • • • • • • • Behavior Analyst Behavioral Technician/Milieu Staff Chemical Dependency Counselor Nurse Occupational Therapist Psychiatrist Psychologist Social Worker Spiritual Care Person (Clergy, Imam, Monk, Priest, etc.) Vocational Counselor March 2005 Inpatient Inpatient Inpatient Intensive “Regular” Closed Open CD Outpatient Outpatient 3:1 5:1 5:1 4-6 per FTE 16-30 per FTE And of course, Self Help groups have zero staff. 27 March 2005 Meeting Objections 28 Meeting Objections • Enabling. Some see assertive multiple condition care as enabling maladaptive behavior. Some see preference of empathic approaches as “too soft” and do not wish to give up confrontational methods. – Some clients will try to violate boundaries, and manipulate you. That is part of their illness. – Empathic approaches model desired behaviors and help the client to learn new responses – Empathy does NOT mean giving up one’s boundaries. One does not need to use confrontive approaches to establish or maintain those limits. March 2005 Case Management 15-30 per FTE 29 • Harm Reduction and Abstinence. Some object to the harm reduction model being applied, favoring traditional abstinence instead. – Harm reduction can take place any time, anywhere – Harm reduction can improve the client’s sense of success and hopefulness when facing shortfalls in his/her goals – Harm reduction, when consistently applied, leads to abstinence in many cases (New Hampshire-Dartmouth ACT Team study) March 2005 30 5 Mental Illness and Type of Drugs Meeting Objections • It is tempting to associate certain drugs with certain types of mental illness. • Theoretical Fidelity. Some argue that theoretical fidelity must be maintained for maximum effect. Theoretical fidelity is most important if you are engaged in academic research comparing methods, but in the applied world, many practitioners are more pragmatic that that. People in the situation easily can make use of theories and methods that may be conflicting. For example: – Bipolar patients sometimes use excess alcohol during depressive phases, and marijuana during manic phases – Major depression patients tend to make use of depressants like alcohol, when they have co-occurring anxiety; and stimulants such as cocaine and marijuana when there is no concomitant anxiety. – PTSD often co-exists with high use of alcohol. Indeed, sobriety often increases experiences of anxiety, flashback and dissociation, at least early in recovery. – Use of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator by non-analysts – Use of CD recovery language to describe social interactions of mentally ill people March 2005 31 March 2005 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Alcohol Mental Illness and Type of Drugs • Alcohol is common use in all segments of the population. Among the seriously and persistently mentally ill (SPMI), it produces more difficulty than in the general population. • As a general rule, the SPMI need less alcohol to reach the level of disinhibition. • The sedating effects of alcohol may be exaggerated by prescribed medication. • Prescribed medication also may affect the degree of alcohol tolerance as well as the withdrawal effects. • Some drugs appear to be less related to specific mental illness. – Methamphetamine seems to cut across many sectors. – Designer drugs, such as ecstasy, seem more associated with certain lifestyles than types of illness. March 2005 33 March 2005 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Alcohol 34 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Alcohol • Detoxification risks increase with many medications associated with SPMI. Medical detoxification regimens are necessary to retain safety. • Chronic alcohol use increases SPMI risks – Greater risk to the liver – Greater risk of mental impairment or dementia – Risk of potentiation effects between alcohol and prescribed medications, including overdose risks March 2005 32 • Some persons with SPMI go off of their prescribed medications in order to drink – The original symptoms re-emerge – These symptoms are complicated by alcoholic effects • Risky behaviors • Aggressive behaviors • Lack of responsibility • Both the SPMI and alcohol abuse must be addressed when the individual returns to the care delivery system 35 March 2005 36 6 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Alcohol Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Alcohol • Some medications can be of assistance to helping those with SPMI to deal with alcohol desires • Should those with SPMI ever drink? – The stakes are very high – By some statistics, those with SPMI are 9 times more likely to develop alcohol related disorder than the general population – A very high proportion of those returning to care as a result of provisional discharges used alcohol just prior to their readmission March 2005 – Disulfiram (Antabuse) can help in the short term, for the individual to establish new habits. Compliance issues arise in the long term. – Naltrexone (Revia) can help indirectly, by acting on the pleasure centers, and reducing cravings • Certain medications, such as benzodiazepines, should be considered very carefully before their prescription, due to cross dependency effects 37 March 2005 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Alcohol Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Cannabis • Cannabis, in the form of ground leaf marijuana, or in the more concentrated form of hashish, is common in the culture to the point that it carries little stigma. Even though it remains illegal in most settings, many people consider it to be acceptable “main stream” behavior to use it. • Cultural ambivalence is evident. Law enforcement still interdicts marijuana, while at the same time, public figures such as Jay Leno (who uses no mood altering substances himself) and Kevin Eubanks make jokes about routine use. One last word of caution that those with SPMI often must be reminded: Beer is alcohol. March 2005 39 March 2005 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Cannabis 40 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Cannabis • Cannabis is absorbed into fat cells, and thus remains in the system for weeks after the last use. This can reduce detoxification risks, as the substance is removed gradually. This effect may reduce the effects of withdrawal. It also can complicate the clinical picture for those with SPMI. • There is no evidence that cannabis actually causes mental illness, although a user may exhibit symptoms that mimic mental illness while intoxicated. That said, cannabis is a stressor to the system, and can evoke symptoms of mental illness in those who are so predisposed. • Long term cannabis use degrades the immune system, can lead to cardiac and pulmonary problems, and disrupts hormone production. It also reduces cognitive functioning and attention span. • The principal active ingredient in marijuana (THC) is considered to be a mild hallucinogen. It is not addictive in the classical sense, but can foster psychological dependence easily. • Even in people with no mental illness, THC can evoke feelings of paranoia, isolation, and delusion. • Because marijuana is illicit, there is no standard dosage or quality. Street marijuana also can contain additives that are harmful in themselves. March 2005 38 41 March 2005 42 7 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Cannabis Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Stimulants • Treatment of co-existing SPMI and cannabis dependence is challenging. The user often resists medication, or “forgets” to follow the prescribed treatment. • Differentiation can take place by noting the symptom complex after detoxification. If symptoms persist, that suggests that the individual either already had or was predisposed to mental illness. March 2005 • Stimulants are currently are a popular item of abuse. • Current common stimulants of abuse include: – – – – – – – – – 43 Amphetamine Caffeine Cocaine Dextroamphetamine Ecstasy (MDMA) Ephedrine Methamphetamine Methylphenidate MDA March 2005 44 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Stimulants Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Stimulants • Stimulants produce temporary arousal of the nervous system. Some stimulants also tend to produce a feeling of euphoria. • At higher doses, hyper-arousal takes place including: • The typical pattern of stimulant abuse is to ingest stimulants with enough frequency so as to maintain a “high” while avoiding the episodes of depression that follow heavy use. • These episodic periods of use are called “runs” and may last for several days without sleep, followed by a “crash.” • Following the stimulant crash, there typically is a period of intense craving. The user may become involved in criminal activities in order to finance repeated drug purchases. – Hyper-awareness – Hyper-vigilance – Hyper-sexuality • At very high doses, the individual is subject to confusion, disorientation, and cardiac arrhythmia. • Episodes of mania or psychosis can be precipitated by stimulants, and depression often follows episodes of stimulant intoxication. March 2005 Depression 45 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Stimulants March 2005 High Crave 46 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Opiates and Opioids • Stimulant abuse exacerbates any existing mental illness. The results easily can be disastrous, even in modest use patterns. • Stimulant abusers typical also abuse sedating drugs to moderate stimulant effects, as well as drugs of opportunity. This increases the risk of polysubstance dependence. • Detoxification can take weeks. Some stimulants can produce permanent ablation of critical nervous transmission areas of the brain. Substances such as methamphetamine can produce a mental sensation often called “fuzz” that can last for years. • Effective treatment usually involves cognitive behavioral methods • Opiates are natural drugs derived from the opium poppy and include such substances as morphine and codeine. • Opioids are synthetically produced extensions of or alternates to opiates. This includes such substances as heroin and oxycontin. • These substances initially were used medicinally. For example, heroin originally was a registered brand name of a substance developed by Bayer Pharmaceuticals and sold over the counter for years. March 2005 March 2005 47 48 8 Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Opiates and Opioids Specific Drugs and Mental Illness: Opiates and Opioids • These substances produce responses that are analogous to natural endorphins. In modest doses, they can alleviate pain, but because they also evoke strong feelings of pleasure, they quickly and easily can become objects of abuse and addiction. • Users appear calm, even stuperous to the observer. As the substance begins to wear off, the individual become anxious, agitated, depressed, and may begin to go into withdrawal. • Withdrawal symptoms can be overwhelmingly taxing. These include dysphoria, aches (including bone aches), cramps, diarrhea, hyperactivity, restless or kicking legs, and other similar events. • Individuals with mental illness are at very high risk of decompensation when using opiates or opioids. • Opioid agonist therapy (using methadone, buprenorphine, or LAAM) is very useful and effective with addicts who are not mentally ill. However, agonist approaches have not been well studied among the mentally ill. Clinical experience suggests the need for very close monitoring of individuals with SPMI who make use of agonist therapy. • Certain therapies themselves pose a risk. For example, some making use of methadone have been found selling their emesis to addicts. March 2005 49 March 2005 How To Begin? • First, we must establish communication and cooperation among ourselves. Psychiatrists must talk with psychologists. Psychologists must talk with Chemical Dependency Counselors. Chemical Dependency Counselors must talk with Social Workers. • All of the provider community must talk with selfhelp groups like AA, and advocacy groups like NAMI. • We all must communicate with the client and his/her significant others. March 2005 51 50 How To Begin? • We must meet the client where s/he is today, and work from there. • We must work within the social and political systems to improve stable housing options. • We must remain hopeful and optimistic. March 2005 52 9