Nuts and Bolts Management of Alcohol Problems in Primary Care Dr Shahid Mohamed Dadabhoy, GP,...
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Transcript of Nuts and Bolts Management of Alcohol Problems in Primary Care Dr Shahid Mohamed Dadabhoy, GP,...
Nuts and Bolts Management of Alcohol Problems in
Primary CareDr Shahid Mohamed Dadabhoy, GP, Partner, Trainer
and Tutor
The Microfaculty, 107-109 Chingford Mount Road, Chingford, London E4 [email protected]
How do I make all of this Alcohol stuff work in the cold harsh unforgiving fluorescent light of a NHS Primary Care Monday morning?
A party political broadcast from the NHS Party
Who are these two men…?
Outline Why manage alcohol problems in Primary Care at
all? How should we be managing Alcohol problems in
Primary Care? Identification and Brief Advice (IBA) The Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test
(AUDIT) and why we should use it? Putting it all together RCGP Certificate In the Management of Alcohol
Problems in Primary Care
Why manage alcohol problems in Primary Care at
all?
More than 20% of adults registered with a GP will drink in at least one of the following ways:
Higher risk (Harmful) > 50 u/week; men > 35 u/week; womenIncreasing Risk (Hazardous) 22 – 49 u/week; men
15 – 35 u/week; womenBinge > 8 units at once; men
> 6 units at once; women
The scale of the problem
Why? (1) Alcohol continues to have a harmful impact on many Individuals families and
communities
26% (around 10 million) of adults in England drink more than the lower-risk guidelines –
3–4 units of alcohol a day for men and 2–3 units of alcohol a day for women
Estimated cost of alcohol related harm to the NHS in England is £2.7 billion per year. (Statistics on alcohol; England 2009)
Why? (2)
Between 15,000 and 22,000 premature deaths annually in England and Wales
Nearly 5,000 (3.5%) cancer deaths per annum are attributable to alcohol
1,200 associated deaths per year due to haemorrhagic stroke
10% of deaths due to hypertension
Liver Cirrhosis is now the 5th most common cause of death and
continues to rise
Why? (3) Alcohol misuse in London
London has a higher proportion of dependent drinkers than any other region in England (Local Alcohol Profiles for England)
11 to 15 year olds in London now drink the equivalent
of 180,000 bottles of lager a week (London Assembly June 09)
Hospital rate for 11 to 15 year young women almost
double for young men of same age (Profile of young Londoners’ drinking, 2009)
The Why (4)- It Costs….
Alcohol related ambulance call out £ 188.00
Alcohol related hospital admission £ 716.00
Alcohol related A/E attendance £ 75.00
Cost of Alcohol related Liver transplant £ 80,000
National Audit office 2008
Why? (5) Rate of alcohol-related admissions
per 100,000 population (EASR)
NI 39 VSC 26 Rate of alcohol-related admissions per
100,000 population (EASR)
Waltham Forest and Neighbouring PCTs 2008/09 (provisional annual refresh)
PCT Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
Total
% increase from 2007/08
5NC Waltham Forest 398 421 416 410 1645 10% 5A4 Havering 324 358 359 358 1399 6%
5C2
Barking and Dagenham 457 467 463 452 1839 5%
5C5 Newham 441 481 502 536 1960 3%
5NA Redbridge 346 376 360 365 1448 7%
London 367 376 372 373 1488 7%
England 385 393 389 395 1562 6%
Why? (6) PCT Comparison of rise in the Rate of admissions
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
12%
PCT
Pe
rce
nt
ris
e
Why? (7) Thinking laterally about Alcohol
Mental Health contacts e.g. QoF reviews for SMI, Depression etc Overall lifestyle advice Domestic violence Other substance misuse Injury Contacts with Unscheduled Care Contacts with Criminal Justice Sexual Health contacts e.g. Emergency Contraception Alcohol is both the most commonly used over he counter
hypnotic and psychotropic agent.
Why? (8) Knowledge on Alcohol amongst Health Professionals can be poor?
Undergraduates and Postgraduates training grades are still taught the CAGE questionnaire.
Knowledge focussed on dependent drinkers
Little Practical Knowledge of how to address issues in Primary Care
The key to providing the most cost-effective care is to through a preventative and early intervention strategy to provide as little care as possible…
How should we be managing Alcohol
problems in Primary Care?
How? At every opportunity! Proactively- go looking for problem drinking In a wide range of presentations and
contexts By everybody in the practice. Primary Care is well placed to do this
Alcohol Harm reduction Strategy
Improve primary care responses
Actions to support these objectives:
Provide Identification and Brief advise (IBA) to Higher risk and Increasing risk drinkers and refer those dependent on alcohol, into specialist treatment.
Develop guidance on management of alcohol in primary care.
The Dundee Story Since the 1970s Professor James David Edgar
Knox, FRCP Edin Died: 10/08/2010 The Dundee Courier Dundee Sheriffs Court Proceedings
on Thursdays
Identification and Brief Advice (IBA)
What is IBA?
Identification and Brief Advice
- Understanding units
- Understanding risk levels
- Knowing where the patient sits on the risk scale
- Benefits of cutting down
- Tips for cutting down
IBA Evidence base
- For every eight people who receive simple alcohol advice, one will reduce their drinking to within lower-risk levels (Moyer et al., 2002)
- This compares favourably with smoking cessation where only one in twenty will act on the advice given. (This improves to one in ten with nicotine replacement therapy.) (Silagy & Stead, 2003).
Benefits of IBA
would result in the reduction from higher-risk to lower-risk drinking
in 250,000 men and 67,500 women each year (Wallace et al, 1988).Risky drinkers are twice as likely to moderate their drinking 6 to 12
months
when compared to drinkers receiving no intervention (Wilk et al, 1997).Can reduce weekly drinking between 13% and 34%,
resulting in 2.9 to 8.7 fewer mean drinks per week,
with a significant effect on recommended or safe alcohol use
(Whitlock et al, 2004).Reductions in alcohol consumption are associated with a
significant dose-dependent
lowering of mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure (Miller et al, 2005).
What is a unit? How to calculate units?One unit is equivalent to 10ml or 8g of pure alcoholYou can calculate the Units: - Volume (mls) X ABV( %) __________________ 1000 Tip: In a litre of any alcoholic drink its strength (%age)is also the total number of units, e.g. in one litre bottle of 40% strength vodka there are 40 units
Drink Diary
What are the recommended lower-risk guidelines?
3–4 units of alcohol a day for men and
2–3 units of alcohol a day for women
The Alcohol Use Disorders
Identification Test (AUDIT) and why we
should use it?
Screening Tools in Primary care
Audit :Alcohol use and disorder identification (10 Questions)
Audit-C :Audit alcohol consumption questions (first 3 Questions of Audit)
Audit-PC :Audit primary care (5 questions of Audit)
FAST :Fast alcohol screening test (4 questions from Audit starting with a single screening question)
M-SASQ :Modified single alcohol screening question
AUDIT Questions How often do you have a drink containing alcohol? How many drinks containing alcohol do you have on a typical day when you are
drinking? How often do you have six or more drinks on one occasion? How often during the last year have you found that you were not able to stop
drinking daily once you had started? How often during the last year have you failed to do what was normally expected of
daily you because of drinking? How often during the last year have you needed a first drink in the morning to get
yourself daily going after a heavy drinking session? How often during the last year have you had a feeling of guilt or remorse after
drinking? How often during the last year have you been unable to remember what happened
the night daily before because of your drinking? Have you or someone else been injured because of not in the during the your
drinking? Has a relative, friend, doctor, or other health care worker been not in the during the
concerned about your drinking last year last year or suggested you cut down?
Why use the AUDIT family of assessment tools? Cross-national standardization: the AUDIT was validated on
primary healthcare patients in six countries It is the only screening test specifically designed for international use;
Identifies hazardous and harmful alcohol use, as well as possible dependence;
Brief, rapid, and flexible; Designed for primary health care workers; Consistent with ICD-10 definitions of alcohol dependence
and harmful alcohol use Focuses on recent alcohol use. Integrated into GP software (if you actually look)
Audit-C and Audit
c.90% accuracy for detecting heavy drinking (Bush et al) Currently regarded as the gold standard
Audit C Scoring: A total of 5+ indicates increasing or higher risk drinking.An over all total score of 5 or above is Audit-C positive. Proceed to next 7 questions to complete full Audit
Full Audit Scoring
0 – 7 Lower risk, 8 – 15 Increasing risk,16 – 19 Higher risk, 20+ Possible dependenceIf Q. 4, 5 or 6 > zero = possible emergent or established dependence.
Putting it all together
Prochaska and DiClemente (1982)
Pre-contemplation (no consideration of changing)
Contemplation (thinking about changing)
Preparation (making plans to change) Action (actually in the process of
changing) Maintenance (working to prevent
relapse)
Measurement as an Intervention Hawthorne Effect Promoting Insight
“Booze gave me that John Wayne Feeling”
Delivering IBA First two tasks
1) Share the AUDIT score with the Patient,
- How do you feel about this score ?
Refer patient to the graph on the patient information leaflet
measuring patient’s consumption against the general population.
2) Attempt to interest them in the idea that their drinking is possibly
increasing risk or higher risk or dependent drinking-It suggests you are drinking at a level that will be risky/ very risky -for your health
Would you be prepared to talk a little more about this?
Refer patient to the “common physical and emotional effects”
on the information sheet.
Delivering IBA next two tasks: 3) If they are interested, explore what benefits they might get from
cutting down - Refer patient to this section of the information sheet
Here is a list of benefits of cutting down – do any of them appeal to you?
- Scaling Question for assessing readiness for change
On a scale of 1-10, how important is it to you to be cutting down your drinking?
4) Discuss tips to cut down and ask the patient to keep a drink diary
- Book a Follow-up appointment
- Refer to alcohol services for extended advice as appropriate
- Refer to specialist services if the score is 20+
Whilst waiting for a specialist assessment, advise the person to- reduce alcohol consumption somewhat where possible, but not to stop suddenly where there are concerns about precipitating problems from alcohol withdrawals
Avoid activities where alcohol misuse may be hazardous (e.g. caring for children, swimming, driving).
To consider involving friends and family in the treatment process,
where possible.
What advice should I give to a
person who is dependent on alcohol?
Outcomes Patients scoring: 0 – 7 Lower risk, give
patient information leaflet. For score of 8 – 15 (Increasing risk) and 16 –
19 (Higher risk): provide brief advice, give patient information leaflet and refer patients for extended advice if necessary to- e.g.Turning Point
For score of 20+ (Possible alcohol dependence) Community Drug and Alcohol Team
(CDAT)
For more information:
IBA:
Alcohol Learning Centre websitehttp://www.alcohollearningcentre.org.uk/eLearning/IBA/ http://www.alcohollearningcentre.org.uk/eLearning/Training/CommIBATrain/IBATrainRes/
AUDIT:http://whqlibdoc.who.int/hq/2001/WHO_MSD_MSB_01.6a.pdf
A couple of notes for commissioners….
“Always remember that your weapon was made by the lowest bidder”
US Military
“No bucks….No Buck Rodgers”
NASA
RCGP Certificate In the Management of
Alcohol Problems in Primary Care
RCGP Certificate in the Management of Alcohol Problems in Primary Care
Launched September 2009 1200 healthcare professionals have completed it Epidemiology and Evidence Base of alcohol problems from a
Primary Care perspective Assessing Alcohol Intake Screening for Alcohol Problems with the new tools AUDIT Delivering IBA “at the coalface”-the bulk of the day involving key
points in consulting styles. Initial management of more dependent alcohol usage Medical
Issues, Community Detox and Care Planning
The How ? (1) RCGP Certificate in the Management of Alcohol Problems in Primary Care
The Department of Health Alcohol identification and Brief Advice
e-learning course
(done before the face to face training, 75%+ passmark)
http://www.alcohollearningcentre.org.uk/eLearning/IBA/
One day training event.
Self completed work book.
The How ? (2) Accessing the training day
National Events (…check the website)
Local Events (…pester your educationalists)
The How ? (3) Local training days
You need: A RCGP Approved Trainer
A minimum number of 5 people to attend any
local event in order for it to be recognized by the RCGP.
You also need (and the RCGP will not pay for):The Gig- the venueThe Kit- the equipment (presentation AV)The Grub(s?!)- Catering
The How Much? …the sordid question of coin…
National Events- £250
Local Events- £150 per course participant before the event – covers
- registration for the certificate- educational pack materials
It does not cover the cost of venue, approved trainers, equipment hire etc.
For more information www.rcgp.org.uk/substancemisuse.
Ask me! Shahid [email protected]
Alcohol Certificate Coordinator RCGP Substance Misuse [email protected]
Any questions?