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From screening into treatment: Implementation solutions for Alcoholism therapy Thomas R. Kosten MD JH Waggoner Chair and Professor of Psychiatry & Neuroscience Baylor College of Medicine Research Coordinator VA Substance Use Disorders QUERI
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Purpose of this Program To compare barriers and benefits in PCC for treating problem drinking using Brief Interventions (BI) and for treating alcoholism using naltrexone (NTX). To compare VISNs and facilities in providing BI and NTX using 3 care models: TIDES, Behavioral Health Laboratory (BHL), and the PCC providers themselves.
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Outline of Presentations Kosten: introduce BI and NTX for alcohol use disorders (AUD). Harris (PERC): very limited use of NTX for AUD in VA. Bradley: EPRP chart reviews of AUD treatment in PCC. Oslin: BHL outcomes in providing BI and NTX for AUD in PCC. Kirchner: implementing TIDES for AUD treatment in PCC Daily: 2 year implementation of TIDES for treating AUD in PCC across VISN 16
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Stopping drinking is easy, I’ve done it hundreds of times Mark Twain
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Alcohol Screening on AUDIT-C: Q3 FY06 by VISN (…. Target)
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Rates of Provider Advice (B.I.) Rates of Provider Advice (B.I.) Patient Survey (n=14,000 screen+) “In the past year did a VA provider advise you to decrease drinking or not drink?” National Mean=28% (VISN range = 20-36%) Thus: Brief Interventions (BI) done Uncommonly
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Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome Signs: tremor, blood pressure and pulse elevated, adrenergic arousal Symptoms: agitation, anxiety, hallucinations Peak at 3 days, Last 7-10 days Seizures: Delirium Tremens: fatal complication
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Are medications needed for detox treatment? Obtain breath alcohol level – withdrawal occurs as level falls and usually not above 100-150 mg% Assess level of withdrawal symptoms (CIWA) Level of care needed: inpatient, medical setting, duration, medical complications, support? Types of medications Setting & support needed for medical safety & adherence
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Behavioral interventions during withdrawal treatment: Motivational Interventions Brief Motivational Interventions Course – INTRAnet: www.bmiforsuv.org www.bmiforsuv.org Over 750 VA staff in Primary Care completed course Four course modules: – Background, MI Basics, Assessment, Feedback Four separate shorter modules available by Dec 15th.
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Can medications reduce alcohol relapse? YES! Naltrexone – opiate antagonist taken orally or by once monthly injection (Vivatrol) Over 25 studies showing clinical and cost efficacy over placebo in preventing relapse Pharmacogenetic selection of best candidates (family HX good surrogate) Other medications – acamprosate, disulfiram, topiramate, carbamazepine, also combinations Most effective, if abstinent at medication start
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Naltrexone and Relapse Rate by Mu Opiate Receptor Genotype
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“Perhaps it would help if I go over it one more time.”
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