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Prevention and Treatment of Prescription Drug Abuse on the College Campus. Minimal Abuse Maximum Care. Josh Hersh M.D. Staff Psychiatrist Miami University. Disclosures. Dr. Hersh serves as a Treatment Advocate for Reckitt-Benckiser Pharmaceutical
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Prevention and Treatment of Prescription Drug Abuse on the College Campus Minimal Abuse Maximum Care Josh Hersh M.D. Staff Psychiatrist Miami University
Disclosures • Dr. Hersh serves as a Treatment Advocate for Reckitt-Benckiser Pharmaceutical • Generic drug names are listed with Trade names with the exception of Pill Identification
Multiple articles on scope of the problem • “Prescription Drug Abuse Rises on Campuses”—ABC News • “Report: Prescription Drug Deaths Skyrocket”—Foxnews.com • “Stimulant Abuse Rises on the College Campus”—The Columbus Dispatch • “Prescription Drug Abuse on the Rise in America”—Chicago Tribune
Drug Overdoses • Drug induced death now outnumbers suicide, injury by fire arms, and homicide • Emergency room visits from prescription drug overdoses doubled from 2004 to 2009 • Overdose deaths from painkillers have risen from less than 2,901 in 1999 to 11,499 in 2007 • By 2007, more teenagers used opioid analgesics recreationally than used marijuana11Center for Disease Control
Famous Celebrity Deaths • Marilyn Monroe • Health Ledger • Michael Jackson • Anna Nicole Smith • Elvis Presley • Whitney Houston?
Prescription Opioid Drugs Vicodin Percocet OxyContin Tylenol #4 w/codeine Lortab Opana
Adderall Concerta Vyvanse Prescription Stimulant Drugs Ritalin Adderall XR
Prescription Sedative Hypnotics Xanax Klonopin Ativan Ambien
What is Prescription Drug Abuse? • Taking prescription medication without a prescription • Taking more prescription medication than prescribed (also called misuse) • Taking prescription medication with unintended routes of administration (intranasal or I.V.)
What is Prescription Drug Abuse, continued • Diverting prescription medication (selling it, trading it, or giving it away) • Harmful consequences from a controlled substance (DSM-IV) • Obtaining controlled substances from different doctors (Doctor Shopping)
What is Dependency? • Tolerance and withdrawal symptoms • Decline in normal activities • Unsuccessful attempts to cut down or control use • Use for longer period or larger amounts than intended • Use consumes lot of time to acquire and/or recover from effects • Continued use despite physical and/or psychological problems
How Common is Abuse on the College Campus? • Ohio State University surveyed 5000 students in 2008 General Survey • Opiates--9.2% at least once per year (higher in intramural sports participants) • Sedatives--5.1% at least once per year • Stimulants--4.4% at least once per year
How Common is Misuse? • World Health Association estimates about 50% of people do not take prescription drugs as prescribed • Maryland study found 35.8% of college students reported that they had diverted a drug at least once in their lifetime.1 • Prescription stimulants--61.7% diversion • Prescription opiates--35.1% diversion • 9.3% of students sold medication 1J Clin Psychiatry. 2010 March; 71(3): 262–269
Reasons for Prescription Drug Abuse • Stimulants—cramming, delaying sleep, weight loss, Sleep Disorders, ADHD symptoms, recreational, dependency • Opiates—pain (especially athletes), anxiety, insomnia, recreational, dependency • Benzodiazepines—anxiety, insomnia, recreational, dependency
Reasons for Co-Administration/Co-Abuse • Combining stimulants with alcohol to drink longer and counteract sedation • Combining opiates or benzodiazepines with alcohol to increase intoxication (dramatically increases rate of overdose) • Combining benzodiazepines with stimulants to decrease anxiety from stimulants
Medical risks (cardiac and stroke risks, liver damage, nasal perforation, blood-borne diseases, overdose) Psychiatric illness (depression, anxiety, psychosis, sleep disturbance) Inability to attend classes/do schoolwork Inability to work and financial problems Relationship problems Criminal behavior Consequences of Abuse/Dependence
MAXIMUM CARE MINIMAL ABUSE Prevention of Prescription Drug Abuse • Interdisciplinary treatment protocols to treat ADHD, Anxiety Disorders, Sleep Disorders, and pain (Minimal Abuse/Maximum Care) • Help physicians say “NO!” • Student education on scope of problem and how to care for controlled substances • Legal consequences for criminal behavior (e.g. selling meds, forging scripts, etc.) • Enforcement of medical standards
MINIMAL ABUSE MAXIMUM CARE Interdisciplinary Treatment of ADHD • Initial Phone Screening • Attention Problem Evaluation (APE) • ADHD Workshop • Behavioral Interventions • Miami University Learning Center Planner • Medication • Academic Coaching and Therapy
Initial Phone Screening • Front desk staff refers all students with ADHD symptoms to phone screening • Counselor does brief phone screening to refer students to proper treatment setting • Students may be sent for an Attention Problem Evaluation, to the Learning Center, to the ADHD workshop, or for a complete initial evaluation
Attention Problem Evaluation (APE) • Semi-structured interview to gather basic information • Includes diagnostic criteria for ADHD • Includes screening out other causes of inattention such as medical causes, Sleep Disorders, Substance Use Disorders, and other psychiatric disorders • Includes comprehensive treatment plan
ADHD Workshop • One hour psychoeducational workshop required prior to ADHD treatment for ALL students seeking medication • Includes education about ADHD, behavioral interventions, use of the Miami University Planner, sleep hygiene, and procedures for taking medication • Education about risks and benefits of medication including suggestions for avoiding misuse and diversion
Behavioral interventions for ADHD • How to keep a planner • How to use cell phone to keep track of appointments • How to improve sleep hygiene • Treating college like a full time job • Minimizing distractions
The Miami University Learning Center Planner • The planner is an essential part of this approach • Every student being treated for ADHD has this planner • Teaches block scheduling, grade tracking, and syllabus tracking • Provides list of resources including workshops at the learning center • Helps students with study skills and procrastination
Medication • Stimulants are used according to the weekly planner • The effective dose is found and used throughout the remainder of treatment • The prescriber delineates times the student will take the medication and gives only amount needed for the month • Techniques are implemented to prevent tolerance to stimulants (i.e. drug holidays, discontinuing caffeine)
Academic Coaching and Therapy • Coaching and/or therapy can be required for medication use • Academic Coaching Weekly Sessions Utilizes the Miami University Planner Provides accountability • Therapy Address Comorbities (anxiety, substance use, eating disorders, etc.)
MINIMAL ABUSE MAXIMUM CARE
MAXIMUM CARE MINIMAL ABUSE InterdisciplinaryTreatment of Anxiety Disorders • Refer to anxiety management workshops and/or individual therapy • Try non-addictive substances first (SSRI’s, buspirone, and beta blockers) • If benzodiazepines are needed, limit amount of benzodiazepines (i.e. 10 per month) • Monitor frequently for signs of misuse and diversion
MAXIMUM CARE MINIMAL ABUSE
MAXIMUM CARE MINIMAL ABUSE interdisciplinary treatment ofSleep Disorders • Refer to anxiety management workshops and/or individual therapy • Referral to sleep disorders clinic for concerns about narcolepsy or sleep apnea • Try behavioral techniques (sleep hygiene, white noise, etc.) • Consider non-controlled substances • Limit amounts of controlled substance such as zolpidem (10 per month)
MINIMAL ABUSE MAXIMUM CARE
MINIMAL ABUSE MAXIMUM CARE interdisciplinary Treatment of Pain • Referrals and communication with surgeons, PCP’s, physical therapy, and/or counselors • Preference for non-controlled substances such as NSAID’s • Limit supply of opiates for severe, acute pain • Meet frequently and monitor for signs of misuse and diversion
Diagnosis of Prescription Drug Abuse/Dependence • History (non-judgmental stance, admission of problems, wanting help) • Pain, Anxiety Disorders, Sleep Disorders, and ADHD(ask about self-medicating) • DSM-IV criteria (abuse vs. dependence) • Drug seeking behavior) • Signs of intoxication or withdrawal • Prescription drug monitoring system • Urine drug tests
Screening Tools • Comprehensive Drug Use Screening and Assessment: NIDA-Modified ASSIST • Interactive online screening tool, includes tobacco, alcohol, prescription, and illicit drugs • Generates a numeric Substance Involvement Score that suggests the level of medical intervention necessary Http://www.drugabuse.gov/nidamed/screening
Management of Prescription Drug Abuse and Dependence • Identify “Stage of Change” • Pre-contemplation—Security if needed Don’t enable the problem--Contact all physicians prescribing to the student and make them aware of problem • Contemplation and Action Non-judgementalstance—disease model Let student know options for treatment Inpatient vs. outpatient treatment
Why Treat Opiate Dependence on the College Campus? • Shortage of community providers • Inpatient treatment not very effective • Improves retention of students • Prevents overdose • Decrease criminal behavior • Decrease the spread of infectious disease (e.g. HIV, HCV/HBV, STI) • Treatment is effective and rewarding
Qualifications for Prescribing Buprenorphine/Naloxone • Be licensed to practice medicine • Have the capacity to refer patients for psychosocial treatment • Limit their practice to 100 patients receiving buprenorphine at any given time • Be qualified to provide buprenorphine Certification in addiction specialty or completion of an 8 hour training course • Receive a DEA license waiver
CHEMICAL Properties of Buprenorphine/Naloxone • Partial opioid agonist; ceiling effect at higher doses (safer than most opioids in overdose) • Blocks effects of other agonists (can’t get high off opioids while on buprenorphine) • Binds strongly to opioid receptor, long acting (once daily dosing)
Buprenorphine/NaloxoneTreatment Protocol • Pretreatment Screening Can be over phone or in person Make sure student is appropriate • Intake Complete history and physical Check for other drug use (i.e. benzo’s) • Induction Dose and monitor with COWS Watch for precipitated withdrawal
Buprenorphine/NaloxoneTreatment Protocol • Stabilization Follow up the next day and 1 week Consider initial supervised administration • Maintenance Monthly appointments, weekly therapy, andregular urine screens • Medically Supervised Withdrawal Wait until ready Taper over the course of several months
Buprenorphine/Naloxone in College Health Practice DeMaria et. al. J Am Coll Health. 2008 Jan-Feb;56(4):391-3. The implementation of buprenorphine/naloxone in college health practice
Conclusions • Prescription Drug Abuse is a growing problem on the college campus • Creating interdisciplinary treatment protocols may help in prevention • When prevention is not effective it is important to not enable the problem and help those receptive to treatment • Buprenorphine/Naloxone is a safe and effective treatment for opiate dependence that can be given on the college campus