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Addiction Medicine: Closing the Gap between Science and Practice PDF

586 Pages·2012·3.46 MB·English
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Addiction Medicine: Closing the Gap between Science and Practice June 2012 Funded by: The Annenberg Foundation The Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund and The Franklin Mint The New York Community Trust Adrian and Jessie Archbold Charitable Trust Board of Directors Lee C. Bollinger Rev. Edward A. Malloy, CSC President, Columbia University President Emeritus, University of Notre Dame Ursula M. Burns Doug Morris Chairman and CEO, Xerox Corporation CEO, Sony Music Entertainment Columba Bush Bruce E. Mosler Former First Lady of Florida Chairman, Global Brokerage, Cushman & Wakefield, Inc. Joseph A. Califano, Jr. Founder and Chairman Emeritus, CASA Columbia Manuel T. Pacheco, Ph.D. President Emeritus, University of Arizona and Kenneth I. Chenault University of Missouri System Chairman and CEO, American Express Company Joseph J. Plumeri Chairman and CEO, Peter R. Dolan Willis Group Holdings PLC Chairman, ChildObesity180 Jim Ramstad William H. Foster, Ph.D. Former Member of Congress (MN-3) President and CEO, CASA Columbia Shari E. Redstone Victor F. Ganzi President, National Amusements, Inc. Chairman of the Board PGA Tour E. John Rosenwald, Jr. Melinda B. Hildebrand Vice Chairman Emeritus, J.P.Morgan Ralph Izzo, Ph.D. Michael I. Roth Chairman of the Board, CEO and President, Chairman and CEO, The Interpublic Group Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc. (PSEG) of Companies, Inc. Gene F. Jankowski Mara Burros Sandler President, CBS Broadcasting, Retired Michael P. Schulhof David A. Kessler, M.D. Chairman, GTI Holdings LLC Jeffrey B. Kindler Louis W. Sullivan, M.D. President Emeritus, Morehouse School of Medicine Jeffrey B. Lane Chairman, CASA Columbia John J. Sweeney Alan I. Leshner, Ph.D. Clyde C. Tuggle CEO, Executive Publisher, Science, American Senior Vice President, Chief Public Affairs and Association for the Advancement of Science Communications Officer, The Coca-Cola Company Directors Emeritus James E. Burke (1992-1997) Donald R. Keough (1992-2010) Jamie Lee Curtis (2001-2009) LaSalle D. Leffall, Jr., M.D., F.A.C.S. (1992-2001) Jamie Dimon (1995-2009) Nancy Reagan (1995-2000) Mary Fisher (1996-2005) Linda Johnson Rice (1992-1996) Betty Ford (1992-1998) George Rupp, Ph.D. (1993-2002) Douglas A. Fraser (1992-2003) Michael I. Sovern (1992-1993) Barbara C. Jordan (1992-1996) Frank G. Wells (1992-1994) Leo-Arthur Kelmenson (1998-2006) Michael A. Wiener (1997-2009) Copyright ©2012. All rights reserved. May not be used or reproduced without the express written permission of The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University. The CASA Columbia National Advisory Commission on Addiction Treatment Drew E. Altman, PhD (Chair) June E. Osborn, MD President and Chief Executive Officer President Emerita The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation Harvey V. Fineberg, MD, PhD Manuel T. Pacheco, PhD President President Emeritus, University of Arizona Institute of Medicine and University of Missouri System Mark S. Gold, MD The Honorable Jose R. Rodriguez University of Florida College of Medicine Circuit Judge and McKnight Brain Institute Ninth Judicial Circuit of Florida Departments of Psychiatry, Neuroscience, Anesthesiology, Community Health & Family Reverend Msgr. Stephen J. Rossetti, PhD, DMin Medicine Clinical Associate Professor Chairman, Department of Psychiatry Associate Dean for Seminary and Ministerial Programs Shelly F. Greenfield, MD, MPH The Catholic University of America, Chief Academic Officer, McLean Hospital The School of Theology and Religious Studies Professor of Psychiatry, Former President and Chief Executive Officer Harvard Medical School Saint Luke Institute, Inc. Director, Clinical and Health Services Research and Education Leonard D. Schaeffer Division on Alcohol and Drug Abuse, Judge Robert Maclay Widney McLean Hospital Chair & Professor University of Southern California Elizabeth R. Kabler President Steven A. Schroeder, MD Rosenstiel Foundation Distinguished Professor of Health and Health Care, Department of Medicine Myles V. Lynk, JD Director, Smoking Cessation Leadership Center Peter Kiewit Foundation University of California, San Francisco Professor of Law and the Legal Profession Faculty Fellow, Center for Law, Science & Louis W. Sullivan, MD Innovation’s Program in Public Health Law President Emeritus and Policy Morehouse School of Medicine Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law Arizona State University Table of Contents Foreword and Accompanying Statement by Drew Altman, PhD ............................................. i I. Introduction and Executive Summary .....................................................................................1 The CASA Columbia Study.................................................................................................4 Key Findings ........................................................................................................................6 Addiction Is a Brain Disease..........................................................................................6 As with Other Health Conditions, There Are Clear Risk Factors for the Development of Addiction .................................................................................7 Addiction Frequently Co-Occurs with Other Health Conditions ..................................7 Addiction Can Be a Chronic Disease.............................................................................7 A Lack of Standardized Terminology Compromises Effective Interventions ...............7 Multiple Addictive Substances and Behaviors Frequently Are Involved in Risky Use and Addiction .........................................................................................7 Public Attitudes about the Causes of Addiction Are Out of Sync with the Science .....8 Physicians and Other Health Care Providers Should Be on the Front Line for Addressing this Disease ...........................................................................................8 Screening and Intervention Are Effective at Addressing Risky Substance Use and Forestalling Addiction ....................................................9 Effective Therapies to Treat and Manage Addiction Exist ............................................9 The Importance of Tailored Interventions and Treatment ...........................................10 Public Attitudes about Addiction Treatment Reflect the Prevailing Non-Medical Approach to Addiction Care ............................................................10 Most People in Need of Treatment Do Not Receive It ................................................10 Most Referrals to Publicly Funded Treatment Come from the Criminal Justice System .........................................................................................11 Less than Half of Treatment Admissions Result in Treatment Completion ................12 Patients Face Formidable Barriers to Receiving Addiction Treatment .......................12 The Spending Gap........................................................................................................12 Most Funding for Addiction Treatment Comes from Public Sources .........................13 The Education, Training and Accountability Gap .......................................................13 The Profound Disconnect between Evidence and Practice ..........................................13 Recommendations and Next Steps.....................................................................................14 Reform Health Care Practice .......................................................................................14 Use the Leverage of Public Policy to Speed Reform in Health Care Practice ............15 II. What Is Addiction? .................................................................................................................19 Addiction Is a Brain Disease..............................................................................................20 The Risk Factors for Addiction..........................................................................................22 Genetic Risks ...............................................................................................................22 Biological Risks ...........................................................................................................23 Psychological Risks .....................................................................................................23 Environmental Risks ....................................................................................................23 Early Initiation of Use ..................................................................................................24 Risky Use and Addiction Frequently Co-Occur with Other Health Conditions ................24 Addiction Can Be a Chronic Disease.................................................................................25 Models for Understanding Addiction ................................................................................26 Evolving Approaches to Addressing Addiction ................................................................26 Defining the Terms ............................................................................................................29 The Continuum of Substance Use................................................................................29 Public Attitudes about Addiction .......................................................................................34 Perceived Causes of Addiction ....................................................................................35 III. Prevalence and Consequences ..............................................................................................39 Defining the Problem .........................................................................................................40 Risky Substance Users .......................................................................................................41 Risky Tobacco Use ......................................................................................................43 Risky Alcohol Use .......................................................................................................44 Risky Illicit Drug Use ..................................................................................................46 Risky Use of Controlled Prescription Drugs ...............................................................47 Addiction............................................................................................................................48 Special Populations ............................................................................................................51 Pregnant Women ..........................................................................................................51 Adolescents and Young Adults ....................................................................................51 Older Adults .................................................................................................................52 Co-Occurring Disorders ...............................................................................................52 Members of the Military Exposed to Combat..............................................................53 Involvement in the Justice System ...............................................................................55 Consequences of Risky Substance Use and Untreated Addiction .....................................55 Tobacco ........................................................................................................................58 Alcohol .........................................................................................................................59 Illicit Drugs ..................................................................................................................60 Controlled Prescription Drugs .....................................................................................61 IV. Screening and Early Intervention ........................................................................................63 The Need for Patient Education, Screening and Intervention throughout the Lifespan ....64 Childhood and Adolescence ........................................................................................64 Young Adulthood.........................................................................................................65 Middle and Later Adulthood ........................................................................................65 Attending to Co-Occurring Conditions ..............................................................................66 Patient Education and Motivation ......................................................................................66 Screening............................................................................................................................66 Laboratory Tests ..........................................................................................................68 Brief Interventions and Treatment Referrals .....................................................................69 Tobacco ........................................................................................................................69 Alcohol and Other Drugs .............................................................................................70 Effectiveness of Screening and Brief Interventions...........................................................71 Tobacco ........................................................................................................................72 Alcohol .........................................................................................................................72 Other Drugs ..................................................................................................................73 Implementing Screening and Brief Interventions in Health Care and Other Settings .......74 Primary Care ................................................................................................................74 Emergency and Trauma Care.......................................................................................76 Health Care for Pregnant Women ................................................................................77 Mental Health Care ......................................................................................................78 Dental Care ..................................................................................................................78 Pharmacies ...................................................................................................................78 High School, College and University Settings ............................................................78 Justice Settings .............................................................................................................79 The Workplace .............................................................................................................80 Government-Funded Social Service Systems ..............................................................81 Barriers to Effective Implementation of Screening and Brief Interventions .....................81 Insufficient Training ....................................................................................................81 Competing Priorities/Insufficient Resources ...............................................................82 Inadequate Screening Tools .........................................................................................83 V. Treatment and Management of Addiction ...........................................................................85 A Comprehensive Approach to Treatment ........................................................................86 Assessment .........................................................................................................................87 Stabilization .......................................................................................................................88 Cessation of Use ..........................................................................................................88 Detoxification ..............................................................................................................89 Acute Care .........................................................................................................................92 Pharmaceutical Therapies ............................................................................................92 Psychosocial Therapies ..............................................................................................102 Combined Therapies ..................................................................................................104 Nutrition and Exercise ...............................................................................................106 Chronic Disease Management .........................................................................................107 Medically Supervised Disease Management .............................................................107 Case Management ......................................................................................................108 Support Services ..............................................................................................................109 Mutual Support Services ............................................................................................109 Auxiliary Support Services ........................................................................................113 The Use of Technology in Addiction Treatment and Disease Management ...................114 Public Attitudes about Addictive Substances and the Need for Addiction Treatment ....114 Perceptions of the Relative Need for Treatment Based on Substance of Addiction .114 Perceptions of the Goals of Treatment .......................................................................115 Perceptions of the Types of Interventions that Constitute Treatment ........................116 Perceptions of the Effectiveness of Treatment ..........................................................116 VI. Tailored Treatment for Special Populations .....................................................................119 Co-occurring Medical Disorders......................................................................................119 Co-occurring Mental Health Disorders ............................................................................120 Tobacco Cessation .....................................................................................................121 Treatment for Addiction Involving Alcohol and Other Drugs ..................................121 Adolescents ......................................................................................................................122 Tobacco Cessation .....................................................................................................122 Treatment for Addiction Involving Alcohol and Other Drugs ..................................123 Women .............................................................................................................................124 Pregnant Women ........................................................................................................124 Older Adults .....................................................................................................................125 Racial and Ethnic Minorities ...........................................................................................126 Individuals of Minority Sexual Orientation .....................................................................126 Veterans and Active Duty Military ..................................................................................127 Individuals Involved in the Justice System ......................................................................128 Juvenile Offenders .....................................................................................................128 Adult Corrections .......................................................................................................128 VII. The Addiction Treatment Gap .........................................................................................131 Most People in Need of Treatment Do Not Receive It ....................................................133 Variations in the Treatment Gap by Primary Substance Involved ............................134 Variations in the Treatment Gap by Key Patient Characteristics ..............................135 Regional Variations in the Treatment Gap ................................................................137 Sources of Funding for Addiction Treatment ..................................................................137 Privately-Funded Treatment ......................................................................................138 Publically-Funded Treatment.....................................................................................138 Trends in Spending on Addiction Treatment .............................................................139 Expenditures by Providers and Types of Services .....................................................139 Treatment Admissions .....................................................................................................141 Treatment Referrals and Venues ......................................................................................142 Treatment Completion .....................................................................................................145 Variations in Treatment Completion by Source of Referral ......................................146 Variations in Treatment Completion by Primary Substance Involved ......................146 Variations in Treatment Completion by Key Patient Characteristics ........................146 Link between Funding Source, Type of Service Provided and Treatment Completion ..146 Barriers Patients Face in Accessing and Completing Addiction Treatment ....................147 Misunderstanding of the Disease ...............................................................................147 Negative Public Attitudes and Behaviors Toward People with Addiction ................148 Privacy Concerns .......................................................................................................150 Cost ............................................................................................................................151 Lack of Information about How To Get Help ...........................................................152 Limited Availability of Services ................................................................................152 Insufficient Social Support ........................................................................................153 Conflicting Time Commitments ................................................................................153 Negative Perceptions of the Treatment Process.........................................................153 Legal Barriers.............................................................................................................154 Barriers to Treatment Access and Completion in Special Populations ...........................154 Individuals with Co-Occurring Conditions ................................................................154 Pregnant and Parenting Women.................................................................................155 Adolescents ................................................................................................................155 Older Adults ...............................................................................................................156 The Homeless.............................................................................................................156 Veterans and Active Duty Military ............................................................................157 Rural Populations .......................................................................................................157 Native Americans.......................................................................................................158 VIII. The Spending Gap ............................................................................................................159 The Rational Approach to Risky Substance Use and Addiction .....................................159 Costs of Our Failure to Prevent and Treat Addiction as a Medical Condition ................160 The Largest Share of Costs Falls to the Health Care System ....................................160 Cost Savings of Addiction Screening, Intervention and Treatment ................................161 Screening and Early Intervention ...............................................................................162 Addiction Treatment and Disease Management ........................................................164 Insurance Coverage of Addiction Treatment is Limited ..................................................166 Parity Laws ................................................................................................................166 The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 ..........................................168 Gaps in Coverage within Public and Private Insurance Plans Continue to Impede Comprehensive Addiction Care .................................................................169 IX. The Education, Training and Accountability Gap ...........................................................175 The Size and Shape of the Addiction Treatment Workforce ...........................................176 Licensing and Credentialing Requirements for Individuals who Provide Addiction Treatment .....................................................................................................177 Medical Professionals ................................................................................................178 Mental Health Professionals ......................................................................................183 Acupuncturists ...........................................................................................................185 Addiction Counselors.................................................................................................186 Licensure, Certification and Accreditation Requirements for Addiction Treatment Programs and Facilities .................................................................................................187 State Licensing Requirements....................................................................................188 Federal Regulatory Requirements ..............................................................................189 Accreditation Requirements.......................................................................................190 Professional Staffing Requirements ...........................................................................191 Treatment Service Requirements ...............................................................................193 Quality Assurance Requirements ...............................................................................195 X. The Evidence-Practice Gap ..................................................................................................199 Current Approaches to Risky Substance Use and Addiction Are Inconsistent with the Science and Evidence-Based Care ..................................................................199 Patient Education, Screening, Brief Interventions and Treatment Referrals .............200 Assessment, Stabilization and Acute Treatment ........................................................204 Tailored Treatment Services ......................................................................................208 Chronic Disease Management ...................................................................................210 Barriers to Closing the Evidence-Practice Gap ...............................................................212 The Addiction Treatment Workforce is Not Qualified to Implement Evidence-Based Practices .......................................................................................212 Health Professionals do not Implement Evidence-Based Addiction Care Practices .216 Inadequate Use and Development of Pharmaceutical Treatments for Addiction ......219 Inadequate Quality Assurance ...................................................................................220 Inadequate Insurance Coverage .................................................................................222 No Overarching Organizing Body for Addiction Science and Treatment .................223 Efforts to Integrate Substance Use Prevention and Treatment into Mainstream Medicine ...................................................................................................223 XI. Recommendations and Next Steps .....................................................................................227 Reform Health Care Practice ...........................................................................................228 Incorporate Screening and Intervention for Risky Substance Use, and Diagnosis, Treatment and Disease Management for Addiction into Routine Medical Practice ..............................................................................228 All Medical Schools and Residency Training Programs Should Educate and Train Physicians to Address Risky Substance Use and Addiction ......................229 Require Non-Physician Health Professionals to Be Educated and Trained to Address Risky Substance Use and Addiction ......................................................229 Develop Improved Screening and Assessment Instruments ......................................230 Establish National Accreditation Standards for All Addiction Treatment Facilities and Programs that Reflect Evidence-Based Care .................................230 Standardize Language Used to Describe the Full Spectrum of Substance Use and Addiction..............................................................................................................230 Use the Leverage of Public Policy to Speed Reform in Health Care Practice ................231 Condition Grants and Contracts for Addiction Services on the Provision of Quality Care .........................................................................................................231 Educate Non-Health Professionals about Risky Substance Use and Addiction ........231 Identify Patients at Risk in Government Programs and Services where Costs of Risky Use and Addiction Are High .....................................................................231 Develop Tools to Improve Service Quality ...............................................................231 License Addiction Treatment Facilities as Health Care Providers ............................232 Require Adherence to National Accreditation Standards that Reflect Evidence-Based Care ..............................................................................232 Require that All Insurers Provide Coverage for Comprehensive Addiction Care .....232 Expand the Addiction Medicine Workforce ..............................................................232 Implement a National Public Health Campaign ........................................................233 Invest in Research and Data Collection to Improve and Track Progress in Addiction Prevention, Treatment and Disease Management ................................................233 Implement the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) Recommendation to Create a Single Institute Addressing Substance Use and Addiction ..................................234 Appendix A-Methodology .........................................................................................................235 Appendix B-Key Informant Interview Guide and List of Key Informants ..........................245 Appendix C-National Addiction Belief and Attitude Survey (NABAS) ...............................253 Appendix D-Survey of New York State Addiction Treatment Directors .............................269 Appendix E-Survey of New York State Addiction Treatment Staff .....................................285 Appendix F- National Panel and National Online Survey of Members of Professional Associations Involved in Addiction Care ...........................................................................297 Appendix G-Survey of Participants in Recovery ....................................................................305 Appendix H-Screening and Assessment Instruments .............................................................311 Notes ............................................................................................................................................325 Bibliography ...............................................................................................................................429 Accompanying Statement by Drew E. Altman, PhD, Chair, The CASA Columbia National Advisory Commission on Addiction Treatment In homes, doctors’ offices, hospitals, schools, prisons, jails and communities across America, misperceptions about addiction are undermining medical care. Although advances in neuroscience, brain imaging and behavioral research clearly show that addiction is a complex brain disease, today the disease of addiction is still often misunderstood as a moral failing, a lack of willpower, a subject of shame and disgust. Addiction affects 16 percent of Americans ages 12 and older--40 million people. That is more than the number of people with heart disease (27 million), diabetes (26 million) or cancer (19 million). Another 32 percent of the population (80 million) uses tobacco, alcohol and other drugs in risky ways that threaten health and safety. Like other public health and medical problems, we understand the risk factors for addiction. We have effective ways of screening for risky use and intervening. While as of now there is no cure for addiction, there are effective psychosocial and pharmaceutical treatments and methods of managing the disease. But as this landmark report by CASA Columbia shows in sharp detail, this is where the comparison with other health conditions ends. Unlike other diseases, we do little to effectively prevent and reduce risky use and the vast majority of people in need of addiction treatment do not receive anything that approximates evidence-based care. The medical system, which is dedicated to alleviating suffering and treating disease, largely has been disengaged from these serious health care problems. The consequences of this inattention are profound. America’s failure to prevent risky use and effectively treat addiction results in an enormous array of health and social problems such as accidents, homicides and suicides, child neglect and abuse, family dysfunction and unplanned pregnancies. CASA Columbia estimates that risky substance use and -i-

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