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Addiction SOS
Colleague
Family Member
Friend
Secrecy & Shame
Stepping Out of the
Shadows
Tony Tommasello, PD, PhD
PEAC Maryland, Executive, Director
MPhA Conference -Ocean City
June 7, 2013
At the end of session, participants should be better able to:
1. Explain that drug addiction can be a fatal chronic
condition requiring medical treatment
LEARNING
OBJECTIVES
2. Identify early indicators of substance abuse
3. Express the positive benefits and success of effective
medical treatment
4. Communicate effectively to those with substance use
disorders that treatment is preferable to continued
suffering
ADDICTION:
 VIDEO: Hillbilly Heroin, CurrentTV
ADDICTION: What is it?
Addiction is a
Disease
Cancer
Diabetes
Heart Disease
ADDICTION
Addiction is a Brain Disease
Prolonged Use
Changes
the Brain
in Fundamental
and Lasting Ways
“Healthy” Brain
“Cocaine Addict”
Brain
Addiction is a Brain Disease and It Matters.
Allan Leshner: Science 278(5335), 45-47, 1997.
 Repeated pharmacological stimulation of the reward system trains the brain
to the drug experience.
 Compared to a “normal” brain the addicted brain:
 reacts uniquely to “triggers”
 expresses “anticipatory” neuro-activation
 may be less responsive to a natural stimulus
Aspects of
Addiction
Chronic
Primary
Progressive
Relapsing
Fatal
 Incurable but manageable
 Not relieved by treating a suspected causative
condition
 Gets worse if untreated
 Prone to re-occurrence if untreated
 Premature death in untreated individuals
ADDICTION: How Does It Work?
Healthy Brain – Wired for Pleasure but Why?
Natural
Rewards




Food
Sex
Excitement
Comfort
 Good for you. Good for the species. Do that again.
Reward Circuit
Activation
 Events related to the good feeling are cognitively
experienced and paired to it (Pavlov’s dogs)
 Anticipatory cascade initiated when a component of
the behavior occurs (persons, places, events,
emotions).
Activation of Reward
Acute Reinforcing Effects
Intravenous Self-Administration
Drug
Ethanol
Cocaine
Heroin
Diazepam
Nicotine
PCP
THC
Ibuprofen
Aspirin
Paroxetine
Venlafaxine
Clozapine
Lithium
Memantine
Self-Administered
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
Short – Run
Comparison
DRUG HIGHS
NATURAL HIGHS
 No practice needed
 Start-up costs are high
 Strong effects initially
 practice
 Low-cost start-up (time
and money)
 equipment
 Easy to obtain
 Social bonding
 Limited by beliefs
 Mankind’s best kept secret
Long – Run Comparison
 Drug Highs:
 Natural Highs
 High maintenance costs (tolerance )
 Intrinsic vs. external origin
 Unpredictable effects (street market)
 “It’s the real thing”
 Toxicity and side effects
 Low maintenance costs
 Risks, guilt, and losses
 Skill improves with practice
 The drug, not the individual, is in control
 Trains the brain to drugs
 Artificial stimulus
 Risks are defined, managed, and minimized
 Transferable skills
 The individual is in control
 Protected by natural constraints
ADDICTION: Dependencies
Indicators of Psychological Dependence
1. Concern about drug supply
2. Stockpiling drugs
3. Carrying or “holding’ drugs
4. Taking risks in order to use drugs
5. Using drugs alone
6. Changing friends
7. Finding excuses to use drugs
8. Becoming defensive
Opioid Dependence
IS
What Is Opioid
Dependence?
• A chronic medical condition
affecting the brain
• Manageable, like other
chronic diseases
Opioid Dependence Is NOT
• A moral failing
• A sign of personal
weakness
• Requires long-term
treatment to avoid relapses
• Responds to treatment
21
DSM-5 revisions
1.
Tolerance
2.
Withdrawal
3.
More use than intended
4.
Craving for the substance
5.
Unsuccessful efforts to cut down
6.
Spend excessive time in acquisition
7.
Activities given up
8.
Failure to fulfill major role obligations
9.
Use despite consequences
10. Recurrent use in hazardous conditions
11. Continued use despite consistent social or interpersonal problems
“Substance Use Disorder”: 2-3 mild 4-6 moderate 7-11 severe
ADDICTION: Is it a Choice?
Addiction
Defined
 Addiction = Compulsive use, with loss of
control and continued use despite
problems.
Elements of Compulsivity:

Constant thoughts of drug acquisition

Anticipation of opportunities to use

Defer other priorities of life

Unable to resist desire to use
“Every morning I woke up with the thought that I needed to make $300 today”
Aspects of
Loss of Control
 Inability to use in moderation consistently
 Easier to abstain completely
 Frequent episodes of excessive use
Continued Use Despite Problems
 Loss associated with use
 Multiple crisis not seen as drug-related
 Sincere promises to self and others to quit
 No decision to seek treatment
ADDICTION: Management
 First priority is drug acquisition and use
Addiction
Behaviors
 Negative consequences occur in order
 1) Interpersonal relationships suffer
 2) Productivity declines
 3) Self-Esteem plummets
 4) Health problems emerge or worsen
 Note: Legal problems can occur at any time.
EXAMPLES OF RISK
AND
PROTECTIVE FACTORS
Risk Factors
Domain
Protective Factors
Early Aggressive Behavior
Individual
Self-Control
Poor Social Skills
Individual
Positive Relationships
Lack of Parental Supervision
Family
Parental Monitoring and Support
Substance Abuse
Peer
Academic Competence
Drug Availability
School
Anti-Drug Use Policies
Poverty
Community
Strong Neighborhood Attachment
From NIDA: The Science of Drug Abuse and Addiction
URL: http://www.nida.nih.gov/scienceofaddiction/addiction.html
 Reduce or Control Symptoms
Goals of
Chronic
Disease
Management
 Prevent or Slow Progression
 Sustain or Improve Quality of Life
 Promote Treatment Engagement
 Motivate Patient to Internalize the Locus of Control
 Strive for Medication Adherence Even During
Asymptomatic Periods
Stages of
Change
Change is hard and not immediate
Patience
Self control needed
Change Occurs in Stages
 Pre-comtemplation
 Not thinking change is needed or desired
 Contemplation
 Change may help but not needed now
 Preparation
 Ready to begin change in next 30 days
 Action
 Taking the first step
 Maintenance
 Behavioral change secured and stabilized
ADDICTION: Treatment
Why Treatment ?
Rewards
Negative consequences
Utility Theory
 Dysfunctional lifestyle of opioid addiction makes treatment a desired alternative
 Medications approved for opioid addiction treatment include oral methodone,
buprenorphine/naloxone sublingual tablets and film and naltrexone tablets and
epot injections
Primary Treatments are Non-Pharmacological
1.
Abstinence from illicit and non-prescribed mood altering drugs
2.
Individual and/or group cognitive behavioral therapy
3.
Urine monitoring for drugs of abuse (also sweat, saliva, and blood)
4.
Support group participation


Narcotics anonymous
Alcoholics anonymous
Patient Response to Treatment Varies
 Patient characteristics – age, employment experiences, concurrent
illnesses, family support.
 Patient history – duration and level of drug use
 Past treatment experiences (stepped care)
 Patient motivation
 Length of time in treatment
 Acknowledge & address the presenting crisis
 Family, employment, legal, medical
 Achieve abstinence from drugs of abuse
Order of
treatment
priorities
 Medical withdrawal or opioid maintenance
 Evolve abstinence into sobriety
 Replace the struggle to abstain with a desire to remain drug
free.
 Establish recovery as a life priority
 Internalize the locus of control
 Brutal honesty
Landmark events in recovery
1.
Achieving abstinence
2. Reacquiring one’s sense of responsibility
3.
Reconnecting with a broadening range of emotions
4. Re-establishing intimacy in one’s relationships (parents, siblings, friends)
5.
Being discriminating in selecting and establishing new social connections
Coercion
(leading a horse to
water)
Coerced treatment can be effective.
 Court-Ordered Probation
 Family Pressure
 Employer Sanctions
 Medical Consequences
 Licensing Authorities
“Tie the horse to the trough
and when he gets thirsty he’ll drink” (Father Martin of Ashley)
ADDICTION: Stepping out of the
Shadows
Stepping out
of the
Shadows
 Addiction is a chronic medical condition affecting the
brain
 Pharmacotherapy combined with behavioral
interventions are effective treatments
 Treatment effectiveness is comparable other chronic
diseases
Stepping out
of the
Shadows
 The educational need in the addiction area is massive
 From health professionals to the general population
there is little understanding of the science of
addiction and recent clinical advances in its
treatment.
Stepping out
of the
Shadows
 The secret and seductive nature of this disease obscure its
progression, lead to denial in both the addicted individual and
his/her family, foster continued deterioration until an
egregious complication occurs (arrest, job loss, ER admission
or other dramatic physical distress), and culminates in a crisis
at which point someone reaches out for help.
Stepping out
of the
Shadows
 PEAC is committed to removing the stigma of
addiction and placing it in a medical context,
identifying its signs and symptoms particularly
those in the early stage of illness, and describing its
treatment and recovery potential in order to
increase treatment demand early in the course of
illness.
ADDICTION: Where Do I Go?
Community
Resources
www.PEACMaryland.org
Addiction SOS
Stepping Out of the
Shadows