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History of CoRC. Dr. Milton H. Cambridge Demand Reduction Prevention and Outreach Coordinator. Overview. Development of CoRC 2005 DOD Survey of Health-Related Behavior Alcohol-Related Incidents (ARIs) Drug Positives Comprehensive Substance Abuse Prevention Program (CSAPP). Overview.
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History of CoRC Dr. Milton H. Cambridge Demand Reduction Prevention and Outreach Coordinator
Overview • Development of CoRC • 2005 DOD Survey of Health-Related Behavior • Alcohol-Related Incidents (ARIs) • Drug Positives • Comprehensive Substance Abuse Prevention Program (CSAPP)
Overview • NIAAA 2002: A Call to Action: Chaging the Culture of Drinking at U.S. Colleges • Institute of Medicine 2003: Reducing Underage Drinking: A Collective Responsibility • F. E. Warren 0-0-1-3 Program • CORONA Tasker • CoRC: Fundamental Principles
DOD Survey • DOD Survey of Health Related Behaviors Among Military Personnel http://www.ha.osd.mil/special_reports/2005_Health_Behaviors_Survey_1-07.pdf
Heavy Alcohol Use Trends by Service2005 DoD Survey of Health Related Behaviors Among Military Personnel Army Navy Marine Corps Air Force Unadjusted Adjusted
Trends in Alcohol-Related Negative Effects2005 DoD Survey of Health Related Behaviors Among Military Personnel Army Navy Marine Corps Air Force Serious Consequences Productivity Loss
DoD Self-Reported Drug Use2005 DoD Survey of Health Related Behaviors Among Military Personnel Marijuana Analgesics Steroids Any Illicit Drug aSignificant difference between 2002 and 2005
DoD Self-Reported Drug Use 2005 DoD Survey of Health Related Behaviors Among Military Personnel Significant increase from 2002
2005 Air Force Alcohol Related Incidents (total = 6441) Note: Airmen under 21 account for only 9% of AF population
AF Illicit Drug Use • AD AF FY04 0.45% Drug Positives (1,572 total) • Discharge ≃ 1500 Airmen a year b/c of drug positives • $36-79k avg. cost to produce each trained Airman • Demand Reduction (Detection and Deterrence) • Detection is important to the mission • But once caught, we lose an airman • Deterrence is vital to the mission • Effective prevention results in saving an airman • Comprehensive approach to further reduce use
Substance Misuse: A Clear and Present Danger • Must reduce Alcohol Related Events! • 80+% ADAPT referrals not Abusing/Dependent on Alcohol • “Alcoholism” cannot/should not be our sole focus! • Alcohol misuse is involved in: • 33% of suicides • 57% sexual assaults • 28.5% domestic violence cases • 44% PMV accidents • 33% of our members commit 81% of our ARI’s (17-24 year olds)
FY06 Alcohol-Related Misconduct Airmen under 21 account for only 9% of our total population
Alcohol-Related Misconduct: CoRC FY 06 • ~ 5961 counts of Alcohol Related Misconduct (ARM) in FY06 • 31% Driving While Intoxicated (DWI) or Driving Under the Influence (DUI) • 25% Underage Drinking • 15% Domestic Violence or Other Crimes Against People or Pets/Family Maltreatment • 8% Drunk and Disorderly • 7% Duty Related Incident • 5 % Accidental Injury • 4% Public Intoxication • 3% Crimes Against Property • 2% Contributing to the Delinquency • .02% Open Container Greatest mission impact from alcohol misuse not alcoholism!
The Problem • Impact of drug use and alcohol misuse • Clear and present danger to the mission • Reduces readiness • Wastes critical resources • Erodes our Core Values/the Culture of Airmen
CSAPP Historical Overview • DOD Drug Demand Proposal • Comprehensive Approach to Substance Abuse • Smart Testing – 1 Oct 2004 • Original CSAPP Model • Team Awareness • SHARP Program • Edwards Program • Vandenberg's ALCON • Piloted at 4 AFBs
Air Force Instructions • AFI 44-107 Civilian Drug Testing Program • AFI 44-120 Drug Abuse Testing Program • AFI 44-121 Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention and Treatment (ADAPT) Program • AFI 44-159 Demand Reduction Program • AFI 90-501 Community Action Information Board and Integrated Delivery System
Additional Research Sources • 2002 NIAAA: “A Call to Action: Changing the Culture of Drinking at US Colleges” • 2003 Institute of Medicine (IOM) “ Reducing Underage Drinking: A Collective Responsibility” • 2003 “Preventing Workplace Substance Abuse: Beyond Drug Testing to Wellness”
Community Approach toPopulation Health Services Excellent 100% Leadership Supports Health Behavior Change Installation Policies Enhance Health Prevention and Education Helping Agency Support (IDS) POPULATION Primary Care HEALTH Early Intervention Specialty Care Treatment of Disease 0% Poor
Research Says…. • Comprehensive community approach ideal: • Leadership Driven, Environmental Change, Information, Early Identification and Intervention, Policy/Deterrence, & Alternative Activities • Key: Identify those at of risk • Population based screening/assessment • Good evidence for brief interventions • Tailored feedback (in-person and mailed), Brief Interventions, Primary Care, Web-based programs, etc… Based on SAMHSA and NIAAA recommendations for prevention and early intervention in youth & young adults
Changing the Culture • Culture change requires emphasis on prevention: • Leadership sets the tone -Commanders’ program! • Wide range of prevention efforts • Broad community involvement • Medics offer enhanced screening and early intervention • Create prevention opportunities outside of MTF • Should be responsibility (not morality) based • Standardize elements & evaluation • Implementation must be locally tailored/flexible
0-0-1-3: Basics • Science-based community program from F.E. Warren • 0-0-1-3 is a slogan that is part of a larger program • 0 underage drinking, 0 DUIs, 1 drink/hour, 3 drinks per sitting max • Wing Commander’s Program • ADAPT is a team player--not the lead • All installation IDS/CAIB members had a role • Public Affairs, Security Forces, Services, Command Master Chief/First Sergeants, and Chaplains have particularly involved roles • 4 core levels of change: • Strong Leadership, Individual, Base, & Community
Prevention: 0-0-1-3 Results 68% 64% 93%
0-0-1-3’s Savings in Resources • *68% decrease in alcohol related incidents • 8% increase in available-for-duty rate (or 38 more airmen) • ≃ 230 duty days not lost to Alcohol-Related Incidents • *70% decrease in Article 15s • CCs / Shirts with more time for mission / morale / welfare • Contrary to popular myths, Services showed a profit! • MWRF NIA increased $173K / Club profit of $13K *Comparison of First Quarter 2004 to First Quarter 2005
Corona Tasker Develop a plan to incorporate 0-0-1-3 with other “Culture of Airman” initiatives OPR: AF/DP OCR: SAF/MR,AF/SG,AF/SE,SAF/IE,AETC, AFSPC Suspense: Brief at Corona Top 05 AF/DP co-lead with SG (HQ ADAPT/DR) Established IPT of stakeholders DP, SG, JA, SFS, ILV, CCC, PA, HC, AETC, others
CSAF: Basics for CoRC • Guiding principles • Commander’s program • Responsible drinking vs. abstinence only • Incident deterrence • Attention to prevention: alcohol misuse and abuse • Emphasize Common Airman Culture • Program goals over first year (baseline year FY04) • Decrease alcohol-related incidents (ARIs) by 25% - Underage drinking, DUIs, crimes, etc. - Reevaluate goal after year 1 • Decrease confirmed drug positives by 25% • Reevaluate goal after year 1 WORK HARD – PLAY SMART!
CoRC:Roles and Responsibilities • HQ Personnel (DP): Deliver Concept of Operations • Functional groups developed area specific Toolkits • MTF role at the base level: • Enhanced screening and early intervention • Participation in outreach • Serve as subject matter expert consultants to the CC
CoRC:AF Functional Community Players Public Affairs Legal Security Forces Mission Support/ Services Senior Leadership CC/1st Sergeants Chaplains Medical Treatment Facility
2. INDIVIDUAL LEVEL 3.BASE COMMUNITY 4. LOCAL COMMUNITY 1. LEADERSHIP INTEGRATED 4-PRONGED COMMUNITY APPROACH
CoRC Basics 1. Leadership Driven Program: Message and support from top down 2. Individual Level Opportunities for Change • Assessment/Screening of risk in all personnel • Education/awareness • Brief Interventions and treatment when needed • Responsibility and commitment 3. Base Community Opportunities for Change • Develop range of alternate activities • Consistent and equitable detection/enforcement • Media campaign promoting responsibility • Monitor AF metrics/consider base specific metrics 4. Local Community Opportunities for Change • Assess threat and availability of drugs and alcohol • Develop coalition with community agencies
Culture of Responsible Choices (CORC) • All 72 SG toolkit documents found at: www.afcrossroads.com • Bucket 1: Resources for universal/primary prevention through population-level outreach and screening • Bucket 2: Resources for selected/secondary prevention through targeted, individualized, non-anonymous alcohol and drug screening at Primary Care/Flight Medicine during PHA and routine care • Bucket 3: Resources for Behavioral Health targeted prevention through assessment for alcohol related problems (misuse, abuse, and dependence) and drug use at all Life Skill's intakes • Bucket 4: Resources for ADAPT/DDR staff to use in their role as the Commanders' substance use subject matter experts
Summary • Development of CoRC • 2005 DOD Survey of Health- Related Behaviors • ARIs • Drug Positives • CSAPP
Summary • NIAAA – “A Call to Action: Changing the Culture of Drinking at College Campuses” • IOM – “Reducing Underage Drinking: A Collective Responsibility” • F. E. Warren 0-0-1-3 program • CORONA Tasker
2. INDIVIDUAL LEVEL 3.BASE COMMUNITY 4. LOCAL COMMUNITY 1. LEADERSHIP INTEGRATED 4-PRONGED COMMUNITY APPROACH