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Counseling Opioid Dependent Patients

Counseling Opioid Dependent Patients. Information and Treatment Approaches for Counselors Michael J. McCann, MA Matrix Institute on Addictions. Overview of Presentation . Background information Some general issues in treating opioid dependent patients Some treatment approaches. Opioids .

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Counseling Opioid Dependent Patients

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  1. Counseling Opioid Dependent Patients Information and Treatment Approaches for Counselors Michael J. McCann, MA Matrix Institute on Addictions

  2. Overview of Presentation • Background information • Some general issues in treating opioid dependent patients • Some treatment approaches

  3. Opioids • Relieve pain • Produce and alleviate morphine-like withdrawal • Morphine, heroin, methadone, codeine, hydrododone (Vicodin), oxycodone (Percodan), Darvon, Demerol

  4. Opioid Dependence • Repeated use results in tolerance (more is required for desired effect) • and, • Withdrawal upon cessation of use • Chills, gooseflesh, sweating, yawning • Runny nose, tearing eyes, dilated pupils, • Nausea, diarrhea, • Insomnia, anxiety, craving

  5. Range of Counselor Experience • Broad experience with SA dependence treatment, including opioid dependence • SA treatment experience, but not with opioid dependence • Counselors with no SA treatment experience

  6. Counseling Opioid Dependent Patients: Some General Issues • Recovery and pharmacotherapy • Patient orientation towards recovery • 12-Step meetings • Patient management • A Cog/Behavioral approach

  7. Recovery and Pharmacotherapy • Patients may have ambivalence regarding medication • The recovery community may ostracize patients taking medication • Counselors need to have accurate information

  8. Recovery and Pharmacotherapy • Focus on “getting off” medication may convey taking medication is “bad” • Suggesting recovery requires cessation of medication is wrong • Support patient’s medication-taking • “Medication,” not “drug”

  9. Recovery and Pharmacotherapy: Fact Methadone treatment efficacy% of sample, n=727, Hubbard et al. 1997

  10. Recovery and Pharmacotherapy: Fact • Methadone treatment results in a 4-fold decrease in mortality • John Caplehorn, 1996

  11. Recovery and Pharmacotherapy: Facts and Myths • “Just substituting one drug for another” • “Patients are still addicted” • But, • Medications are legal • Oral vs injected • Taken under medical supervision • Inexpensive

  12. Recovery and Pharmacotherapy: Facts and Myths • “Patients are getting high” • But, • Long acting, slow onset • Matches level of addiction

  13. Patient orientation towards recovery • Often a narrow focus; physical relief is sufficient • Focus on not using illicit opiates vs. new behaviors • Counseling may be viewed as an unnecessary imposition

  14. Patient orientation towards recovery • Patient orientation, counselor response • Impatience, confrontation, “you’re not ready for treatment” or, • Deal with patients at their stage of acceptance and readiness

  15. Patient orientation towards recovery • Patient orientation, counselor response • Be flexible • Don’t impose high expectations • Don’t confront • Non-judgmental acceptance • A motivational interviewing approach

  16. 12-Step Meetings • What is the 12-Step Program? • Benefits: peer support, widely available, social outlet, free • Meetings: speaker, discussion, Step study, Big Book readings • Self-help vs treatment

  17. 12-Step Meetings • Medication and the 12-Step program • Program policy • “The AA Member: Medications and Other Drugs” • NA: “The ultimate responsibility for making medical decisions rests with each individual” • Some meetings are more accepting of medications than others

  18. Urine Testing • A standard treatment component • A tool to prevent drug use • Does not reflect assumption of patient dishonesty • Ideally monitored (temperature strips) • Minimize tampering: containers, purses, backpacks, hot water, etc • Detection times

  19. Urine Testing: Dealing with a positive test • Re-evaluate the circumstances prior to the test • Don’t discuss validity of the result (lab error, etc.) • Don’t confront; provide an opportunity for the patient to explain

  20. Urine Testing: Dealing with a positive test • Reinforce honesty • Partial confession is good enough; move on • Proceed with assumption of drug use • Communicate with physician

  21. Urine Testing: Other Issues • Falsified specimens; avoiding voiding • Indicators: cold, clear, Gatorade, apple juice • Ask the patient about it • Observed test is an option • Avoidance excuses: “can’t go”; “just went”

  22. Patient Management • “Manipulation” • A vestige of the drug-using lifestyle • An old survival skill • An unlikable quality in the world • A manifestation of the disorder in treatment (cardiologists don’t criticize patients having chest pains)

  23. Patient Management • “Manipulation” • Counselor’s responses • Protective cynicism • Trust and openness

  24. Patient Management • Pushing Boundaries • Inappropriate familiarity • Reflexive “manipulation”? • May result from past counseling experiences

  25. Patient Management • Intoxication • Manage the situation, don’t counsel • Ensure patient safety • Arrange transportation

  26. Patient Management • Loitering • May have been acceptable in prior treatments • Creates opportunities for dealing • Not the best use of time • Not well tolerated by neighbors • May reflect problems at home

  27. Counseling Approaches • Provide information and skills • Conditioning Process: you can’t “will” cravings away; modify behavior • Addiction as a brain disease

  28. Counseling Approaches • Information and Skills • Get rid of paraphernalia • Scheduling time • Thought-Stopping for cravings • Evaluate people and places (fools rush in)

  29. Counseling Approaches • Relapse Prevention • Patients need to develop new behaviors • Learn to monitor signs of vulnerability to relapse • Recovery is more than not using illicit opioids • Recovery is more than not using drugs and alcohol

  30. Counseling Approaches • Relapse Prevention Topics • Relapse Prevention Overview • Overview of the concept: things don't “just happen” • Using Behavior • Old behaviors need to change • Re-emergence signals relapse risk • Relapse Justification • “Stinking thinking” • Recognize and stop

  31. A Good Counseling Session • Patients ultimately may need to understand why they became addicted • More important early on: • Understanding the addiction disorder • Making changes in day-to-day life • A good session: the patients leaves knowing more about addiction and recovery

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