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According to the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, alcohol contributes to more than 200 health conditions and about 99,000 deaths in the U.S. each year.[1] According to the CDC, one in six adults in the U.S. binge drinks with 25% doing so at least weekly.[2]
April is National Alcohol Awareness Month, which is a time to increase your personal awareness about alcohol abuse and alcoholism and to recognize these disorders, which can be treated.
Magellan Federal’s Senior Manager in the Adolescent Support & Counseling Services (ASACS), Allison Welliver, LMHC, MCAP, shares her insights on why this month is important. Welliver is a licensed mental health counselor and a master’s level certified addiction professional.
Q: Why is National Alcohol Awareness Month important?
Allison Welliver: National Alcohol Awareness Month is important because it brings awareness to alcohol abuse and dependency and allows people to be screened to see where their use of alcohol falls (low, moderate, or high risk for alcohol abuse or dependence). It also allows people to see how their use of alcohol compares to alcohol use by other people of the same age and sex.
Since alcohol is a legal drug, and so often used in social situations and celebrations, it can be difficult to see when alcohol abuse is happening.
Q: What are signs that someone is addicted to alcohol?
AW: Signs of dependence on alcohol can be behavioral/social or physical. Behavioral/social signs include secretive use, heavy drinking, drinking alone, drinking at inappropriate times of the day (in the morning), and continuing to drink despite the negative impact it has on your relationships, job, and health. Physical signs may include developing a tolerance, developing the “shakes” when not drinking alcohol, disrupted sleep, lethargy, or headaches, and needing a drink to alleviate negative symptoms.
Q: What is the connection between this addiction and mental health?
AW: Addiction and mental health problems are frequently comorbid, meaning that they often occur at the same time. It is a question of which comes first – does the mental health problem cause the addiction or vice versa? Many times, people turn to alcohol or other drugs to cope with mental health concerns that they are having. They could use alcohol to cover up depression or other pain underneath.
Q: What are some steps someone should take if they recognize they need help and what does Magellan offer to support someone who is dealing with alcohol addiction?
AW: First, reach out to a therapist. A therapist can evaluate your use and determine what setting is best to treat your alcohol use. Surround yourself with a positive, supportive network who understands that you need help. You may identify support through connecting with your company’s Employee Assistance Program (EAP), if one is available to you. When contracted with an employer, Magellan offers EAP services to employees and their household members who may question if their use is abnormal, or if they have been having problems related to drinking. EAP services, including counseling, are free and confidential.
Q: Is there anything you would like to add or any resources you want to provide?
AW: There is a free online screening tool that anyone can use to gauge their level of alcohol use. https://alcoholscreening.org/
Additional Resources
[1] Helping Your Patients with Alcohol-Related Problems: https://www.niaaa.nih.gov/health-professionals-communities/core-resource-on-alcohol?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=jul-2022
[2] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/fact-sheets/binge-drinking.htm
With the number of opioid-related overdose deaths in the U.S. reaching a record high last year, it’s time for our nation to fully embrace evidence-based treatment options that best support our communities, loved ones, friends and families in their recovery efforts.
One growing approach—often considered as the gold standard of treatment—is medication-assisted treatment (MAT). MAT is the use of FDA-approved medications in combination with counseling and behavioral therapies to provide a holistic, person-centered approach to the treatment of substance use disorders (SUDs). The use of this treatment approach has grown to nearly 40 percent in residential facilities and is increasingly leveraged by primary care providers nationwide—but more still must be done for widespread adoption.
The most pervasive stigma surrounding MAT is that it merely enables patients to replace one addiction with another. It’s a belief held not only by some groups of doctors and clinicians, but also family members and peer support groups—those whose support is critical to successful recovery. When a patient’s core support system of family members and peers doubts the legitimacy of an evidence-based form of treatment, the likelihood that the patient will follow through long-term is diminished.
Pair that with a lack of understanding and comfort from the medical community around how to administer MAT, limited numbers of physicians who are certified to prescribe this treatment that actually do prescribe the treatment, as well as the number of residential facilities that offer MAT, and we get low adoption rates as a result of these barriers.
There’s a better way to treat opioid use disorder
Although abstinence-based therapy works for a small percentage of those suffering from OUD, MAT offers a successful way for people to fight their addictions in an outpatient environment, in the community in which they live, and avoid hospitalization or institutionalization. It helps those struggling with OUD and other SUDs address underlying conditions that may have contributed to substance abuse—significantly improving the chances of recovery. In one study, more than half of patients utilizing MAT reported opioid abstinence 18 months after beginning treatment.
Today, while 900,000 U.S. physicians prescribe opioids, fewer than 35,000 physicians are certified to prescribe buprenorphine, one of three medications approved to treat opioid addiction. And even fewer actually prescribe buprenorphine to patients. MAT prescribing is not limited to psychiatrists. In fact, primary care providers provide more access to MAT than any other type of provider.
The impact of limited access to MAT on health outcomes cannot be overlooked. One analysis found only one-third of individuals who experienced a nonfatal opioid overdose received access to MAT. Those who received methadone were linked to a 59 percent decrease in mortality rates after one year, according to the analysis. Additionally, individuals who were treated with buprenorphine were associated with a 38 percent decrease in mortality after a year.
Increasing Access to MAT
The SUPPORT for Patients and Communities Act, signed in October 2018, expands the ability to prescribe MAT by increasing clinician eligibility for certification. This provision is a solid and necessary step toward broadening access to treatment; however to make a true impact on the opioid epidemic, we must break the stigma surrounding MAT.
When it comes to recovery, the potential for relapse is high, especially in the early stages when resolve is fragile. It is important to note that for individuals with co-occurring mental health conditions, chronic pain or other addictions, MAT should be supplemented by treatment for those conditions, such as cognitive behavioral therapy. Building in care management support to assist in navigating the treatment process may reduce the possibility of relapse and/or readmission to a substance abuse inpatient or residential rehabilitation program. It also helps provide individuals with the tools needed to live addiction-free.
By taking the time to dispel the myths about non-traditional addiction treatment like MAT, we create an environment that more fully supports a return to complete health—physical, mental and emotional. Fighting the stigmas around MAT is an important step toward enabling those suffering from OUD to recover from their addiction and live healthy, vibrant lives.
Alcohol is part of many traditions and is often served at parties and other functions. And although many drugs are illegal or legal only with a prescription, people may offer them to you.
If you’re in a situation where someone is offering you alcohol or drugs, try this:
Help is available. For additional information, visit MagellanHealth.com/MYMH
Source: Healthwise
There is no mistaking that opioid addiction is a major social issue in the United States but there is also a lot of confusion and misinformation. We’ve included seven frequently asked questions about opioid addiction below.
Opioids are medications prescribed to relieve physical pain. Opioid medications bind to the areas of the brain that control pain and emotions, driving up levels of the feel-good hormone dopamine in the brain’s reward areas, and producing intense feelings of euphoria. As the brain becomes used to the feelings, it often takes more and more of the drug to produce the same levels of pain relief and well-being, leading to dangerously high tolerance levels, dependence, and later, addiction.
Opioids are used to treat moderate to severe pain that may not respond well to other pain medications. They provide relief from an array of symptoms associated with respiratory illnesses, severe coughing, injuries, trauma, surgery, dental procedures and chronic pain.
Taken as prescribed, opioids can be used to manage pain safely and effectively. However, since these drugs also affect the brain regions involved in reward, some people experience a euphoric response. Those who abuse opioids may seek to intensify their experience by taking the drug in ways other than those prescribed.
Physical dependence on opioids means that the body relies on an external source of opioids to prevent withdrawal. Normally the body is able to produce enough endogenous opioids (i.e., endorphins) to prevent withdrawal. However, as tolerance increases over time, eventually the body’s ability to maintain its equilibrium is exceeded and the body becomes dependent on the outside source of opioids. Physical dependence is predictable, easily managed with medication, and is ultimately resolved with a slow tapering off of the opioid.
Unlike physical dependence, addiction is a change in behavior caused by biochemical changes to the brain after continued substance abuse and it is classified as a disease. Addiction takes the form of uncontrollable cravings, the inability to control drug use, compulsive drug use, and continued use despite doing harm to oneself or others. Strong cravings are common to all addictions. These cravings are rooted in altered brain biology. Recovery is the process of reversing, to the extent possible, these brain changes. This is accomplished through therapy and replacing the addictive behaviors with healthy alternative behaviors.
Opioid addiction is a chronic disease, like diabetes, asthma and hypertension. While it can’t be cured, it can be treated to help the person regain a healthy, productive life. Treatment programs typically include detoxification, medication for opioid withdrawal, counseling and the support of family and friends. The goal of the treatment program is to help the person get through the withdrawal successfully and learn new coping skills to address addictive behaviors over the long-term.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
The CDC website features a section devoted to opioid information, data and FAQs. In addition, there are guidelines for prescribing opioids for chronic pain to help ensure patients have access to safer treatment options.
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
NIDA provides information odrugabuse.govn commonly abused drugs, the latest science and treatments, trends and statistics to improve individual and public health.
The American Society of Addiction Medicine
A society of physicians aimed at increasing access to addiction treatment. They offer a nationwide directory of addiction medicine professionals.
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) or 1-800-662-HELP
Find locations for residential, outpatient, and hospital inpatient treatment programs for drug addiction and alcoholism throughout the country.
The Partnership at Drugfree.org or 1-855-378-4373
Provides information and resources on teen drug use and addiction for parents to help them prevent and intervene in their children’s drug use or find treatment for a child who needs it.
Help is available. For additional information, visit MagellanHealth.com/MYMH
Source: Drugabuse.com
“Strung out. Looking for the next fix. A full time job that doesn’t pay, but just takes.”
That’s how one of Magellan’s Recovery Support Navigators defined her addiction to opiates. She has since overcome the stranglehold of addiction and is now in long term recovery. Her experiences, and those of her fellow Recovery Support Navigators, provide the credibility needed to influence their peers who are still struggling with addiction and mental illness that recovery is possible and that desperation does not have to define a life.
An estimated 20.2 million Americans live with a substance use disorder[1]. That’s the population of my home state of Florida. Of that, 2.1 million Americans live with an opioid disorder. Similar to serious mental illnesses, substance use disorders can be difficult to address. Those with the lived experience of walking the path from hopelessness to wellness are experts at engaging individuals with the services and supports that foster the recovery process. Stories of changed lives are not the only proof.
A January 2018 study of our internal recovery support navigation program at Magellan Health found statistically significant improvements for individuals living with substance use and mental health disorders. A key component of the Magellan’s internal peer support program is meeting people where they are. The first engagement with members often happens in an emergency room, inpatient setting, or on the streets. Members then choose where future meet-ups happen. Often, that choice is in the comfort of their own home. If they are experiencing homelessness, the member chooses a safe place.
The study compared utilization of services six months prior to receiving peer support services and six months following the completion of peer support services. Seventy-five percent of the members in the study had a co-occurring mental health and substance use disorder and 50 percent had a co-occurring substance use disorder, mood disorder and psychotic disorder. The study found that members in Magellan’s internal peer support program cost the health plan significantly less in the six months following completion of the peer support program than members who only had care management or who did not receive any intervention from the health plan. The study also found that six months after completing peer services, peer support decreased emergency room and inpatient hospitalizations.
The role modeling by a peer specialist of a life lived well in recovery is evidence for the individual struggling that there can be long term sustainment of recovery. In addition, the data from this study replicates prior findings that peer support has a lasting impact on the lives of those living with substance use and mental health disorders.
[1] Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. (2017). Mental and substance use disorders. Retrieved from https://www.samhsa.gov/disorders
The following is an excerpt from an article appearing in Advances in Addiction & Recovery
Deaths from prescription opioid abuse have more than quadrupled since 1999, prompting President Donald Trump to declare the opioid epidemic a national public health emergency.[1] But while discussions around opioid abuse prevention have intensified, numerous barriers to recovery continue to exist.
For example, one of the most effective ways to combat opioid addiction is through medication-assisted treatment (MAT), an evidence-based approach that combines medication with psychosocial intervention. MAT empowers those suffering from opioid use disorder (OUD) to recover from their addiction while rebuilding their lives.
However, the stigma often related to MAT—on the part of both the medical community and addiction support professionals as well as family members of patients—continues to limit its use across the industry. Further, the need to educate communities and legislators about the complex issues surrounding addiction treatment cannot be overstated. Addiction should be considered a chronic condition, and such treatments need to be viewed the same way.
You can read the rest of the article on pages 24-25 in Advances in Addiction & Recovery.
[1] https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/epidemic/index.html