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Families, addiction and recovery. Louise Martin and Alex Copello Skills Consortium conference, London, 14 th February 2012. Individual vs. social view of addictions.
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Families, addiction and recovery Louise Martin and Alex Copello Skills Consortium conference, London, 14th February 2012
Despite the available evidence and potential gain, shifting the emphasis from individualised treatment approaches to those focused on the substance user’s family and social environment presents a number of significant challenges (Copello, 2006)
Why work with families? 1. ‘Carer burden’ is extremely high and families need support in their own right • Costs are financial, social, psychological, physical and relational • Reciprocity of well-being • Families indirectly influence clients’ using behaviour • We need to consider the whole system of the family, not just the individual when thinking Recovery.
Why work with families? 2. Improved client treatment outcomes • Increases client entry into treatment • Improves engagement and retention of client in treatment • Improves substance use outcomes for clients • Reduces relapse • Families play crucial role in facilitating recovery
How large is the problem? It is estimated that there are approximately 15 million people with drug use disorders globally and 76 million with alcohol use disorders (Obot, 2005). A cautious estimate of just one person seriously affected in each case suggests a minimum of 91 million affected family members Most people would use a greater multiplier and produce a higher figure
What is the extent of the problem? Key findings from UK DPC study about adult family members of drug misusers. What about alcohol misuse? Up to 1 million children are affected by parental drug misuse & up to 3.5 million by parental alcohol misuse (Manning et al., 2009). It is estimated that the impact of drug misuse on the family costs the UK £1.8 billion but also brings a resource saving to the NHS of £747 million through the care provided.
THE UNIQUE SET OF STRESSFUL CIRCUMSTANCES FOR FAMILIES COPING WITH ADDICTION • Has the nature of severe stress, threat and abuse • Involves multiple sources of threat to self and family, including emotional, social, financial, health and safety • Can have significant impact on children • Worry for that family member is a prominent feature • There are influences in the form of individual people and societal attitudes that encourage the troubling behaviour • Attempting to cope creates difficult dilemmas, and there is no guidance on the subject • Social support for the family is needed but tends to fail • Professionals who might help are often at best badly informed and at worst critical
35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 UK Wives Psych P.Care P.Care 1 2 Mexico Control Symptoms of Ill Health Family members; psychiatric out-pts. and Familymembers community controls
Ray et al (2007)Compared family members of people with substance misuse problems with family members of similar persons without substance misuse.Samples:Family members n = 45,677 (male/female – 46/54%)Comparison group n = 141,722 (male/female – 46/54%)More likely to be diagnosed with medical conditions most commonly depression and other psychological problemsRay et al (2007) The excess medical cost… Medical Care
NTA (2008) “Supporting and Involving Carers” • Involve family in treatment where appropriate • Involve family in service planning • Routinely ask about family • Offer carers assessments • Develop support plan if needed • Help family think about how to cope with substance use
Drug Strategy 2010 “Evidence shows that treatment is more likely to be effective, and recovery to be sustained, where families, partners and carers are closely involved. We will encourage local areas to promote a whole family approach to the delivery of recovery services and to consider the provision of support services for families and carers in their own right”
NICE (2007) Drug Misuse: Psychosocial Interventions • Routinely ask about family, and the impact of substance use on family • Involve families in assessment and treatment plan (with consent of client) • Offer carers assessment • Provide written information about impact of drug misuse on families • Offer guided self help where needed • Provide information about support groups • 5 sessions based on Copello’s model • Behavioural Couples Therapy
Practice Some very good examples of services for family members but provision is patchy Implementation of evidence based practice remains low Potential to improve availability and response to families
We know that family members have two related needs: To receive advice and support on their own rightTo be supportive of the relative’s treatment and involved if useful
Family Interventions: Three Broad Categories • interventions that work with family members to promote the entry and engagement of drug and/or alcohol users into treatment • the joint involvement of family members and the relatives using drugs and/or alcohol in the treatment of the user • interventions aimed to respond to the needs of family members affected by drug and alcohol problems in their own right [Copello, Velleman and Templeton, 2005]
Concurrent group treatment Al-Anon Families Anonymous Supportive stress management counselling Parent coping skills training 5 - step intervention TREATMENTS INVOLVING FAMILY MEMBERS (FMs) Working With FMs to engage relation in treatment Joint involvement of FM and their relatives in treatment Responding to Needs of FM in their own rights • Family intervention • Community reinforcement & family training • Unilateral Family therapy • Cooperative counselling • Pressure to change • Conjoint family group therapy • Behavioural couples therapy • Family therapy • Network therapy • Social behaviour & network therapy • M-PACT
The stress-strain-coping-support model Relative’s substance problem Stress on family member Social support Ways of coping Family member strain
5-Step Method • 1 – Listen, reassure and explore concerns • 2 - Give relevant targeted information (eg substances, treatment, support) • 3 - Explore coping responses – ‘engaged’, ‘tolerant’, ‘withdrawn’ • 4 – Discuss social support – map • 5 – Discuss further support needs
Key message: A little support can have wide positive consequences
What can you do? • Find out what’s available in your area and decide what you can offer as a service • Identify families ‘champions’ • Produce an information leaflet for families and carers • Let administrator/ receptionist know what you offer • Add a question about family members to your assessment form • Add ‘family’ to your regular team meeting agendas • Organise a ‘friends and family day’ at your service • Organise 5-step training for staff • Get systems in place for recording contacts, safeguarding issues etc
Potential Obstacles • Not allocating sufficient resources • Absence of managerial buy-in • Expecting this to be done on top of normal caseloads • Seeing it as a ‘luxury’ rather than core • Lack of systems for recording work • Responsibility resting with one person