Publication Date 30/04/2012         Volume. 4 No. 4   
Information to Pharmacists

Editorial

From the desk of the editor

Welcome to the May 2012 homepage edition of i2P-Information to Pharmacists. Rollo Manning has been having some time out having staples removed from the site of his open heart surgery.He is now at home recuperating in Darwin, having arrived home last Friday, beating a cold and hasty retreat from Canberra.We all wish him a speedy recovery and hopefully, he will be fit enough to contribute by next month.
This month, Pharmedia discusses the toll that is taken when someone complains about you to an authority without good cause. Well, the good news is that you can now take action to protect yourself if such a complaint is made, and that may even include action for defamation. Read about a recent case involving two doctors, with Mark Coleman drawing on personal experience to illustrate.

read more
open full screen

Recent Comments

Click here to read...

Safe and effective opioid prescribing in addiction treatment. Article written for UK psychiatry journal.

Dr Andrew Byrne & Associates

articles by this author...

A Harm-Minimisation Research Perspective: Dr Byrne (and his associates) advocate for better policies which are proven to reduce risks for drug users and the general community, under a framework in parallel with Australia’s official policy of harm minimisation.

Safe and effective opioid prescribing in addiction treatment.

Author Dr Andrew Byrne

Abstract:

A large body of research supports the prescribing of maintenance opioids for heroin addiction yet poor quality treatment in the UK has limited the potential benefits. This in turn has caused many to become disillusioned about addiction treatment generally. Inadequate dose levels without the necessary supervision and psychosocial supports have both contributed to this state of affairs in the UK. By failing to address this situation, the National Addiction Centre in London has actually perpetuated it. While some progress has been made in recent years, psychiatry trainees in the UK are ideally placed to help improve the quality of pharmacotherapies in line with other European countries in moving towards an evidence base.

open this article full screen

 

Article:

The principles linking opioid maintenance treatment and behavioural therapies were defined in Dole and Nyswander’s classic paper which is now one of the most quoted in the medical literature [ref 1]. Psychiatrist Marie Nyswander had noted limited success treating heroin addicts in New York using psychoanalytic techniques alone. With Dr Dole, she reported a cohort of ‘hopeless’ New York street addicts responding favourably to a trial of strictly supervised, ‘high-dose’ methadone treatment (mean 100mg/d, range 15-180) with intensive psychosocial supports. They found dramatic reductions in illicit drugs use, excellent retention in treatment along with vocational, social and other demographic improvements. The trial was radical at the time as it placed social functioning as its primary goal, rather than abstinence from all opiates. Patients received daily supervised medication and their drug use was monitored by regular urine tests as part of treatment. Many rigorous studies since have further refined ‘best practice’ and also documented safety data. These were especially important in long-term patients, pregnancy and in those with coexisting mental illness.

Over four succeeding decades, methadone and other maintenance treatments have become just one component of a more complex therapeutic repertoire for addiction including the anti-craving drugs, mood altering medications, detoxification, brief interventions, CBT, formal psychotherapy and other strategies. These are all aimed primarily at reducing the harms from drug addiction while also encouraging engagement in normal social activities. Contrary to popular opinion, the natural history of opiate use, like smoking and alcoholism, in fact moves towards abstinence, with or without treatment [ref 2].

British perspective – historical background of opioid treatment in the UK.

Due to an unwillingness of the dependency establishment to accept methadone as a valid maintenance treatment, a majority of heroin users in treatment in the UK have been subjected to a ‘culture of abstinence’. This is akin to Nancy Reagan’s retort of “just say no to drugs!” Like smokers, drug addicts are generally well aware of the dangers they are taking. Even by 1989 when methadone maintenance was being introduced into many other countries, UK treatment practise was only for short term reduction prescribing. We knew then as now that this leads to relapse in over 90% of cases.

 

At a time when needle sharing was still common, this caused many otherwise preventable cases of HIV. To this day, many doctors in the UK will only condone short-term, low dose methadone. Others continue to implement a punitive policy of enforced dose reductions when drug use, even non-opiate drug use, is found on urine testing. Some NHS clinics refuse to readmit their own old discharged patients for arbitrary periods, raising further barriers for those most needing assistance.

To read the remainder of this article please follow this link and scroll down the page to find the article.

 

Return to home

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a genuine visitor, to prevent automated spam submissions.
Incorrect please try again
Enter the words above: Enter the numbers you hear:

Clinical Newsfeed

health news headlines provided courtesy of Medical News Today.

Click here to read more...

Practice Development

Information Technology

Preventive Medicine

If any difficulty is found in subscribing, please use the "Contact Us" panel found in the navigation bar with the message "subscribe" and your email address.

Email*

Subscribe
Unsubscribe

A security code to prevent automated spam submissions:


Input Code:

  • Copyright (C) 2000-2012 Computachem Services, All Rights Reserved.

Website by Ablecode